bareskin

Adjective

 * 1) Not wearing clothing; not covered by clothing, hair, feathers, etc.
 * 2) * 1907,, “Songs of the Seasons, 3. Love and Autumn” in The Mid Earth Life, Springfield, MA: H.R. Huntting, p. 58,
 * I sought thee in the spring-tide, sweet,—
 * All through the rosy dewy days:
 * A bare-skin boy did guide my feet—
 * A boy with pretty, pouting ways:
 * And oh, ’twas shrewd deceit!
 * 1) * 1931,, Judith Paris, London: Macmillan, Part 2, “The Clipping,” p. 356,
 * He sat there thinking of his youth, of fighting a man bare-skin in White haven and throttling him
 * 1) * 1940, (translator),  , Cambridge: Harvard University Press and London: Heinemann, Nonnos XVI, p. 3,
 * Then Dionysos saw the girl swimming in the water bareskin, and his mind was shaken with sweet madness by the fiery shaft [shot by ].
 * 1) In which participants do not wear clothing.
 * 2) * 1911, Mrs. Todd Lunsford, “As the Twig is Bent,” Kindergarten Journal, Chicago Kindergarten College Alumnae Association, Volume 6, No. 4, p. 141,
 * After your babe’s next bath, put him freely on the bed still in his birthday clothes I happen to know one mother who has made daily practice of this bareskin play with her youngest child.
 * 1) * 1942, “Campus Caravan,” The Hatchet, Volume 39, No. 14, 15 December, 1942, p. 2,
 * the, A.W.O.L. from Ft. Des Moines, who was found doing a bareskin act in a local burlesque, was a misguided miss who had taken these Navy “Strip for Action” posters too seriously.
 * the, A.W.O.L. from Ft. Des Moines, who was found doing a bareskin act in a local burlesque, was a misguided miss who had taken these Navy “Strip for Action” posters too seriously.