answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

It takes about 17 muscles to smile and 43 to frown

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

7y ago

43 muscles to frown and 17 to smile, so in other words be happy, smile :)

This answer is:
User Avatar
User Avatar

Anonymous

Lvl 1
3y ago
this helped alot thx!

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

It takes 47 muscles to make a frown. But, it only takes 17 muscles to make a smile.

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How many muscles does it take to smile and to frown?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What takes more of them to frown than smile?

It take more facial muscles to frown than to smile.


How many bones does it take to smile?

43 "muscles" are used to frown...I'm not aware of bones used to frown


How many facial muscles does it take to show emotion?

It takes 43 muscles to frown and only 17 to smile. So smile!


Exactly how many muscles does it take to frown?

It takes 43 muscles to frown, but only 17 to smile.


How many does it take to smile?

Some claim it takes 43 muscles to frown and 17 to smile, but open Aunt Milda's chain letter and you might be surprised to learn it takes 26 to smile and 62 to frown. And some naysayers claim it's quite the opposite, that in fact it takes more muscles to smile than to frown.


How many muscles does it take to frownsmile?

17 to smile 43 to frown Me and my friend Rasheed Boyd had it correct


How many muscles does it take to laugh?

It was claimed by ( Be Happy) types it takes Five muscles to smile (not laugh) and 37 to frown- conserve energy!


How many facial muscles do you have?

There are 33 muscles in a human face. And no, it doesn't take more muscles to frown than to smile.


How many muscles does it take to smile in numbers?

To smile, it take as many as 15 muscles in total, but ultimately it depends on which elements of a smile you are referring to. The act of raising the corners of your mouth is done by three muscles, primarily the zygomaticus major and risorius muscles and aided by the buccinator muscle. If you squint your eyes while you smile you may also use orbicularis oculi. If you scrunch your nose with your smile then you may also use your procerus and nasalis muscle. If your forehead wrinkles and eyebrows raise then your occipitofrontalis helps as well. For someone with a very expressive smile, they are likely using a lot of their facial muscles (up to 15, the rest of the facial muscles would oppose a smile and cause frowning)."It takes one more muscle to smile than to frown, according to plastic surgeon David H. Song, MD, FACS, assistant professor at the University of Chicago Hospitals.Newspapers around the globe assure us, "Frowning takes more muscles than smiling,"13 to smile, 33 to frown - The Washington Post.10 to smile, 100 to frown - The New York Times,4 to smile, 64 to frown - The Hindu. An urban myth?Only Cecil's "The Straight Dope" got an expert (Dr. Song) to go through the motions. A genuine smile takes two muscles to crinkle the eyes, two to pull up the lip corners and nose, two to elevate the mouth angle, and two to pull the mouth corners sideways. Total smile: 12.On the other hand, a frown needs two muscles to pull down the lips and wrinkles in the lower face, three to furrow the brow, one to purse the lips, one to depress the lower lip, and two to pull the mouth corners down. Total frown: 11.A fake smile, however, only takes two muscles. We detect the fake because "the eyes aren't smiling."


Does it take more muscles to swim or smile?

You take very few muscles to smile and many more muscles are used when you swim.


Does it take more muscle to smile frown chew or jump?

It is either frown or jump.


How many muscle do you use to frown?

There's a stupid saying to the effect that "it takes X muscles to frown, but only Y muscles to smile", where Y is always smaller than X (though the actual numbers themselves vary).The reason it's a stupid saying is that nobody really knows how "many" muscles it takes to smile or frown because the number depends on exactly how you define "muscles", "smile", and "frown". This is also part of why the numbers vary (another part of it is that the people that come up with these sorts of sayings generally have almost no idea what they're talking about, and just pull numbers out of their ... er, the air).There's a somewhat more clever variant that ends "but it doesn't take any to just sit there with a dumb look on your face."