A person who makes a business of taking care of people's hands, especially their nails.
Not Manicure its manikoor which means hour.
There are two roots here in 'manicure': 'mani' comes from manus, meaning "hand," and 'cure' comes from curare,meaning "to care for."
The word manicure comes from the latin mani - hand cure - care meaning to take care of the hands and nails Hope this helps
Manicure is a verb and a noun. Verb: Those young men manicured my lawn. Noun: I'm going for a manicure.
The key difference would have to be that a manicure is when your hands are being treated by soaking, filing, and/or grooming and painting your nails, and a pedicure is when your feet are being treated by soaking, filing, grooming, and/or painting toenails. As for the difference within the meanings of "manicure" and "pedicure", the word manicure came from the latin word manus, meaning "hand", and the word pedicure came from the latin word pedis, meaning "feet".
A sport manicure includes all of the normal processes of a classic manicure except that nails are buffed and no polish is applied. It is often referred to as a buff-manicure.
You manicure your hands and pedicure your feet.a manicure is the hands and a pedicure nis on the feet
Perhaps you a looking for 'manicure'.
manicure bowl? nakakaen un tanga
manicure bowl? nakakaen un tanga
Both epicure and pedicure rhyme with manicure.
Your hands get the manicure, your feet get the pedicure.