| plastic surgery |
Surgery concerned with reducing scarring or disfigurement that may occur as a result of accidents, birth defects, or treatment for diseases.
Ãâó: amsurgguide.mhcc.state.md.us/glossary.htm
|
|---|---|
| plasticity |
Quality of a painting, sometimes referred to as plastic values, when the figures depicted appear to be exceptionally three dimensional.
Ãâó: www.wildlifeart.com/glossery.php
|
| plastic |
Research continues on the composition of doll flesh; however it is known that most, if not all, of the dolls of Doll Games are made entirely of plastic: a synthetic material well known for its role in the mass production of the first B*****. Plastic can be soft and fleshy, as in the rubbery vinyl limbs of a Skipper or Fluff, or hard and shell-like, as in their torsos. ...
Ãâó: ineradicablestain.com/dollgames/glossary.html
|
| plastic |
Material, usually polymers developed from the by-products of oil refining and coal distillation, which, though stable in normal use, changes its shape when pressure or heat (or both) is applied. If the materials soften again when reheated, they are said to be thermoplastic. If, after fashioning, they resist further applications of heat, they are said to be thermoset.
Ãâó: www.eupen.com/glossary/glossarypipe.html
|
| plastic |
1. Pliable; capable of being shaped. Pertaining to the process of shaping or modeling (ie, the plastic arts). 2. Synthetic polymer substances, such as acrylic.
Ãâó: www.clevelandartandhistory.org/HTMLPages/Glossary....
|