The skin on your elbow is usually only loose when you hold your arm straight. If you bend your elbow as far as you can, the skin will probably be tight. You have extra skin on the elbow so that you can bend your arm.
It could also be a form of bursitis or build up of fluids.
Wenis. Prounounced (Wee*nis)
Correct. You have skin on your elbow
Weenis
wenis
Wenis yes sounds weird but it is!
It is a slang term that someone made up for the loose patch of skin outside one's elbow. The skin is more properly called the olecranal skin, covering the point of the elbow (olecranon).
The flap of skin at the elbow is called a wenus.
The skin on the back of one's elbow is called olecranal skin, or colloquially, a weenis.
A wenis is actually the skin at the elbow.
the scientific name for the skin on the elbow is called a weenis. The name of the actual elbow (meaning the pointy part you can see) is called the olecranon.
the scientific name for the skin on the elbow is called a weenis. The name of the actual elbow (meaning the pointy part you can see) is called the olecranon.
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.
The scientific term for the extra skin under the chin is called the Flarper
There are a couple of slang terms for this skin that are not really acceptable for this site. However, the actual term for this skin is olecranal skin (the olecranon is the projection of the ulna behind the elbow).
Yes and no. Wenis is a slang term that is used to refer to the skin at the end of the elbow, but the word itself is not acknowledged as formal. The medical name would be olecranal skin, referring to the area where the skin is found.
no it is not and you are preverted for asking this weird question, the skin on your elbow is a wenis