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 "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
"Eating a peanut butter sandwich" is a gerund phrase. It consists of the gerund "eating," which functions as a noun, along with its object "a peanut butter sandwich." This phrase can act as the subject, object, or complement in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "Eating a peanut butter sandwich is my favorite snack," the phrase serves as the subject.
Nowt.
Prepositional phrase.
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.
cuard
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.
peanut butter
It's an old phrase meaning "that person's personality is so cold I bet butter wouldn't melt in their mouth". It also can refer to a person who is untrustworthy, presenting a cool, nonchalant exterior while secretly harboring evil schemes.