no it is not and you are preverted for asking this weird question, the skin on your elbow is a wenis
Wagina
wagina is the skin in the corner of your hand and also the extra ski on the back of your knee, wenis is the skin on your elbowwenis and wagina get it? u kno?!?!?!?
Wenis yes sounds weird but it is!
Wenis is not an anatomical term and therefore does not refer to any part of an elbow. The bone under the elbow is known as the olecranon. The skin on the olecranon is not specifically named.
The inside of the knee, or knee "pit," is the popliteal fossa.The front of your knee is the prepatellar skin. Wagina, wenis, weenus, or magina, are not real terms or acceptable to describe any body part (even elbows and knees).
A wenis is actually the skin at the elbow.
It isn't, except on urban dictionary, and there it seems to be evenly divided between the skin on the inside and outside of the elbow.
Wenis is the skin ON your elbow.
The inside of the knee, or knee "pit," is the popliteal fossa. The front of your knee is the prepatellar skin. wagina
Your wenis (no, really, I heard that from my science teacher)(and she said its another name for your back of your elbow"so its call your wenis!
Everybody has a wenis, two to be exact. It's the skin on your elbow. Well... I hope he would have skin on his elbow.
wenis
The origin of the word "wenis" (which is the flap of skin on your elbow) comes from a Pharaoh named Wenis. I'm not kidding. I don't know where he ruled, but probably Egypt. Another origin of wenis is also from the band W.E.N.I.S. (Wonderfully Exhilarating Nonsense Intense Singers.) THEY ARE AMAZING. <3