To the OP: a little off topic
If you are serious about dating one of these guys, you better find out about their teeth. My sister, went on a couple of dates (she met online) and their teeth were horrible. Do they have a teeth catagory?
She finally found a great guy (but it was from eHarmony, and not the free site she was on first) Good Luck!
To you, you mean. I wonder.. what do you (collectively) call a slim person with small breasts and doesn't wear makeup or do her hair everyday?
I would call that person thin. It has nothing to do with hair and makeup. Rosie O'Donnell has a square figure... That is stocky. You're reading way too much into all of this.
Before you jump all over her, I would say the same thing she did. I think of 'full figured' or 'big and beautiful' as being heavy but still having a feminine form. The PP used Camryn Manheim as an example:
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She's a bigger lady, but still has some defined curves. Whereas Rosie O'Donnell has kind of a square figure, which is what I would consider 'stocky'.
As someone who's plus size and usually resorts to online dating (I'm quite shy offline and also work an insane schedule and don't like the bar scene), I HATE those descriptions. I noticed that 90% of the men who showed up in my matches would screen anyone who wasn't "slender, athletic/toned, average". Anyway, I tend to visualize them in terms of actresses.
Slender - Angelina Jolie (very thin, but not so thin you can see bones)
About Average - Hilary Duff, Jennifer Garner, Courtney Cox
Athletic/Toned - Hilary Swank
Heavyset - Probably size 18-20
A few extra pounds - Borderline overweight
Big and Beautiful - Me!teeth
Seriously, best description I can think of is Camryn Manheim
Full figured - Same as big and beautiful.
Curvy - Scarlett Johansson, Jessica Alba in her Dark Angel Days
Stocky - Rosie O'Donnell
Others - Nicole Richie, before she gained some weight and actually looked healthy
I also notice that the men who screen their results like that are overweight or non-athletic, so it aggravates me that they think they can get away with having a double standard.
To you, you mean. I wonder.. what do you (collectively) call a slim person with small breasts and doesn't wear makeup or do her hair everyday?
Would you prefer these choices instead?
Gaunt
Skinny
Average
Junk in the Trunk
Fat
Obese
Scale broken
To you, you mean. I wonder.. what do you (collectively) call a slim person with small breasts and doesn't wear makeup or do her hair everyday?
I am surprised to see that several posters things "curvy" means overweight in some way. That would have never crossed my mind. Geeze, I sometimes describe my daughter as curvy. She is 5'8", has a size 4 waist, D cups and wide hips. She has CURVES but she is not even close to being overweight.
I think curvy should mean what you are describing but it has been hijacked to try and make certain body types sound more glamorous. Curvy sounds better then frumpy when in reality many times the person really is describing the same thing. It is kind of in the middle of a little over weight at fat. Comedian Patrice O'Neal does a pretty funny bit on the difference between someone that is fat-skinny and skinny-fat. It is pretty good.
I would put it in the same category as the word Diva. Somehow it has morphed into almost any female singer, especially if they are difficult and over weight, when in reality is is only for celebrated opera singers.
Okay--but then how DOES one describe actually curvy people--if "curvy" is now a euphemism for overweight? IS there a term left that hasn't been hijacked?![]()
Okay--but then how DOES one describe actually curvy people--if "curvy" is now a euphemism for overweight? IS there a term left that hasn't been hijacked?![]()
A term I've heard tossed about is "Thick in all the right places."