flesh

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
11
Words With Friends
11
Letters
5
Pronunciation
/flɛʃ/

Definition of flesh

17 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. (uncountable, usually)The soft tissue of the body, especially muscle and fat.
    “The flesh of chicken, fowl, and turkey has much shorter fibre than that of ruminating animals, and is not intermingled with fat,—the fat always being found in layers directly under the skin, and surrounding the intestines.”
See all 17 definitions

noun

  1. (uncountable, usually)The soft tissue of the body, especially muscle and fat.
    “The flesh of chicken, fowl, and turkey has much shorter fibre than that of ruminating animals, and is not intermingled with fat,—the fat always being found in layers directly under the skin, and surrounding the intestines.”
  2. (uncountable, usually)The skin of a human or animal.
  3. (broadly, uncountable, usually)Bare arms, bare legs, bare torso.
  4. (uncountable, usually)Animal tissue regarded as food; meat (but sometimes excluding fish).
    “Thenne syr launcelot sayd / fader what shalle I do / Now sayd the good man / I requyre yow take this hayre that was this holy mans and putte it nexte thy skynne / and it shalle preuaylle the gretely / syr and I wille doo hit sayd sir launcelot / Also I charge you that ye ete no flesshe as longe as ye be in the quest of the sancgreal / nor ye shalle drynke noo wyne / and that ye here masse dayly and ye may doo hit”
    “Chicken is already the most popular meat in the US, and is projected to be the planet’s favourite flesh by 2020.”
  5. (uncountable, usually)The human body as a physical entity.
    “And the preaſt ſhall put on his lynen albe and his lynen breches apon his fleſh, and take awaye the aſſhes whiche the fire of the burntſacrifice in the altare hath made, and put them beſyde the alter, […]”
    “In my political/cultural mythology Carl remained this larger-than-life figure […] But knowing Carl, the fantasy made flesh, was a different experience. The keen mind that wrote "A Gay Manifesto" was even more perceptive and challenging in real life.”
  6. (uncountable, usually)The mortal body of a human being, contrasted with the spirit or soul.
    “For all flesh is as grasse, and all the glory of man as the flowre of grasse: the grasse withereth, and the flowre thereof falleth away.”
    “For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other: so that yee cannot doe the things that yee would.”
    “1929 January, Bassett Morgan (Grace Jones), Bimini, first published in Weird Tales, reprinted 1949, in Avon Fantasy Reader, Issue 10, But death had no gift for me, no power to free me from flesh.”
  7. (uncountable, usually)The evil and corrupting principle working in man.
  8. (uncountable, usually)The soft, often edible, parts of fruits or vegetables.
    “The flesh of black walnuts was a protein-packed winter food carefully hoarded in tall, stilted buildings.”
  9. (obsolete, uncountable, usually)Tenderness of feeling; gentleness.
    “There is no flesh in man's obdurate heart.”
  10. (obsolete, uncountable, usually)Kindred; stock; race.
    “He is our brother and our flesh.”
  11. (uncountable, usually)A yellowish pink color; the color of some Caucasian human skin.
    “She opened [...] a third that was the peachy white that crayon companies used to call “flesh”.”

verb

  1. (transitive)To reward (a hound, bird of prey etc.) with flesh of the animal killed, to excite it for further hunting; to train (an animal) to have an appetite for flesh.
    “Before they had fleshed the hounds, however, he recollected himself […].”
  2. (transitive)To bury (something, especially a weapon) in flesh.
    “Give me a clean sword and a clean foe to flesh it in.”
  3. (obsolete)To inure or habituate someone in or to a given practice.
    “And whosoever could now joyne us together, and eagerly flesh all our people to a common enterprise, we should make our ancient military name and chivalrous credit to flourish againe.”
  4. (transitive)To glut.
  5. (transitive)To put flesh on; to fatten.
  6. To remove the flesh from the skin during the making of leather.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English flesh, flesch, flæsch, from Old English flǣsċ, from Proto-West Germanic *flaiski, from Proto-Germanic *flaiski, from Proto-Indo-European *pleh₁ḱ- (“to tear, peel off”). Cognates Cognate with Yola vleash, vlesh…

See full etymology

From Middle English flesh, flesch, flæsch, from Old English flǣsċ, from Proto-West Germanic *flaiski, from Proto-Germanic *flaiski, from Proto-Indo-European *pleh₁ḱ- (“to tear, peel off”). Cognates Cognate with Yola vleash, vlesh (“flesh”), North Frisian flaasch, flaosk, Fleesk, fleäsk, floask, flääsk, flååsch (“flesh, meat”), Saterland Frisian Flaask (“flesh, meat”), West Frisian fleis (“flesh, meat”), Cimbrian blòas, vlaisch, vlòas (“flesh, meat”), Dutch vlees, vleesch (“flesh, meat”), German Fleisch (“flesh, meat”), German Low German and Luxembourgish Fleesch (“flesh, meat”), Vilamovian fłaś (“meat; muscle”), Yiddish פֿלייש (fleysh, “flesh, meat”), Danish flæsk (“pork; bacon”), Faroese, Icelandic, and Norwegian Nynorsk flesk (“pork; bacon”), Swedish fläsk (“pork”).

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