Nudity

  • 31nudity — /ˈnjudəti/ (say nyoohduhtee), /ˈnudəti/ (say noohduhtee) noun (plural nudities) 1. the state or fact of being nude; nakedness. 2. something nude or naked. 3. a nude figure, especially as represented in art. {French nudité} …

  • 32nudity — The unclothed state of a human being …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 33nudity — n. the state of being nude; nakedness …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 34Depictions of nudity — Nudity was acceptable to the 19th century French Salon going public, only as long as the setting was clearly classical , depicting characters in a culture where nudity was commonplace, as in this painting by Jean Léon Gérôme (1847) …

    Wikipedia

  • 35List of science fiction works containing nudity — Nudity, frequently found in science fiction, often symbolizes inner or outer situations. In such cases, the circumstance that individuals, groups or entire nations are not clothed is not simply an expression of a natural form of living. It may be …

    Wikipedia

  • 36nudity in art — Representations of the unclothed human body in painting or sculpture. 33 Am J1st Lewd etc § 13 …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 37Public nudity — A woman hands out flyers at the Love Parade in Berlin …

    Wikipedia

  • 38Issues in social nudity — Public nudity: participants in the World Naked Bike Ride Social nudity is nudity in private and public spaces. It is sometimes controversial for addressing, challenging and exploring a myriad of sometimes taboo subjects, stereotypes and mores… …

    Wikipedia

  • 39History of nudity — See also Timeline of non sexual social nudity .It is not known when humans began wearing clothes. Anthropologists logically presume that humans originally lived naked, without clothing, as their natural state. They postulate the adaptation of… …

    Wikipedia

  • 40No-nudity clause — A no nudity clause is a paragraph or a section in a performer’s legal contract that stipulates the performer may not perform nude in a theatrical, television, cinematic, or other type of production. This clause may amount to a performer s right… …

    Wikipedia