Describing a smile where the corners of the lips pull down / the middle is pushed up [on hold]
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There is a specific facial expression that tends to occur when the person conveying said expression is impressed. It reads like a smile but isn't the standard "corners of the lips curling up" smile. The middle of the lower lip pushes up, like a pout but without protruding, or the sides of the mouth pull down. Is there a name for this expression?
phrase-requests nouns
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put on hold as off-topic by MetaEd♦ Nov 29 at 0:01
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions on choosing an ideal word or phrase must include information on how it will be used in order to be answered. For help writing a good word or phrase request, see: About single word requests" – MetaEd
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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There is a specific facial expression that tends to occur when the person conveying said expression is impressed. It reads like a smile but isn't the standard "corners of the lips curling up" smile. The middle of the lower lip pushes up, like a pout but without protruding, or the sides of the mouth pull down. Is there a name for this expression?
phrase-requests nouns
New contributor
put on hold as off-topic by MetaEd♦ Nov 29 at 0:01
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions on choosing an ideal word or phrase must include information on how it will be used in order to be answered. For help writing a good word or phrase request, see: About single word requests" – MetaEd
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
Thank you for asking. Some information will help us to give you the correct answer. Please edit to add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. Include the desired connotation, register (formality), part of speech, and context in which it is to be used, and provide the exact enclosing sentence or passage. See: “How much research is needed? – EL&U Meta”.
– MetaEd♦
Nov 29 at 0:01
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There is a specific facial expression that tends to occur when the person conveying said expression is impressed. It reads like a smile but isn't the standard "corners of the lips curling up" smile. The middle of the lower lip pushes up, like a pout but without protruding, or the sides of the mouth pull down. Is there a name for this expression?
phrase-requests nouns
New contributor
There is a specific facial expression that tends to occur when the person conveying said expression is impressed. It reads like a smile but isn't the standard "corners of the lips curling up" smile. The middle of the lower lip pushes up, like a pout but without protruding, or the sides of the mouth pull down. Is there a name for this expression?
phrase-requests nouns
phrase-requests nouns
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New contributor
edited Nov 28 at 22:36
Chappo
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2,43641224
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asked Nov 28 at 18:54
E.A. Hobbs
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put on hold as off-topic by MetaEd♦ Nov 29 at 0:01
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions on choosing an ideal word or phrase must include information on how it will be used in order to be answered. For help writing a good word or phrase request, see: About single word requests" – MetaEd
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as off-topic by MetaEd♦ Nov 29 at 0:01
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions on choosing an ideal word or phrase must include information on how it will be used in order to be answered. For help writing a good word or phrase request, see: About single word requests" – MetaEd
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
Thank you for asking. Some information will help us to give you the correct answer. Please edit to add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. Include the desired connotation, register (formality), part of speech, and context in which it is to be used, and provide the exact enclosing sentence or passage. See: “How much research is needed? – EL&U Meta”.
– MetaEd♦
Nov 29 at 0:01
add a comment |
Thank you for asking. Some information will help us to give you the correct answer. Please edit to add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. Include the desired connotation, register (formality), part of speech, and context in which it is to be used, and provide the exact enclosing sentence or passage. See: “How much research is needed? – EL&U Meta”.
– MetaEd♦
Nov 29 at 0:01
Thank you for asking. Some information will help us to give you the correct answer. Please edit to add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. Include the desired connotation, register (formality), part of speech, and context in which it is to be used, and provide the exact enclosing sentence or passage. See: “How much research is needed? – EL&U Meta”.
– MetaEd♦
Nov 29 at 0:01
Thank you for asking. Some information will help us to give you the correct answer. Please edit to add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. Include the desired connotation, register (formality), part of speech, and context in which it is to be used, and provide the exact enclosing sentence or passage. See: “How much research is needed? – EL&U Meta”.
– MetaEd♦
Nov 29 at 0:01
add a comment |
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Thank you for asking. Some information will help us to give you the correct answer. Please edit to add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. Include the desired connotation, register (formality), part of speech, and context in which it is to be used, and provide the exact enclosing sentence or passage. See: “How much research is needed? – EL&U Meta”.
– MetaEd♦
Nov 29 at 0:01