If someone has and attractive body but an ugly face they are a butter face. i.e. She's got a great body, butter face.
The phrase butter face is a term one would use to describe a woman who has a beautiful body. But her face on the other hand, is not quite as attractive. It is considered an insult.
The phrase "flood of face" does not have a standard meaning in English. It may be a metaphorical or poetic expression that needs further context to understand its intended meaning.
"According to (concerning, regarding) job satisfaction" is the meaning of the English phrase "vis-Ã?-vis job satisfaction." The phrase precedes the two English word regarding fulfulling work with the French-loaned prepositional phrase vis-Ã?-vis(literally, "face to face").
This means when it comes to a female, everything looks good but-her-head. Get it (in other words she has an ugly face).
Butter - Venna
Nowt.
The figurative meaning of the phrase giving face to the lost is when Forensic Anthropologists give an identity to a person. For example, Forensic Anthropologists find out information such as the victim's race, name age weight, etc.
Prepositional phrase.
cuard
peanut butter
butter face
It is the title of a 1985 comedy/horror film. A young person has lost his hair, the solution seems to be to put Peanut Butter on the bald patch. However much butter makes the hair grow fast and long. Later a solution is found and the family return to normal.
No. The word "of" is a preposition. The noun "butter" is the object of the preposition, and together they form a prepositional phrase.