its tasty
you pick it up,look at it,lick your lips,and swallow the thing!
It uses it's lips to pick the grass from the Savannahs.
The skin on the lips is called the vermilion.
You'll have nail polish on your lips. Now, you can get nail polish on your skin and it won't hurt you; just about everyone who wears it has gotten some on their skin. But with your lips it's different--everything you eat and drink is going to pick up some of the chemicals in the nail polish, and you'll probably wind up poisoned. What YOU want, is glow in the dark lipstick. They make it, it's safe, and it works.
Papaya, mostly the skin of the fruit, can certainly cause a rash. If one experiences this, you shoukld be careful to eat the fruit and avoid the skin.
Lips tend to chap easily because the skin on the lips is thinner and more delicate than the skin on the face. Additionally, lips do not have oil glands to keep them moisturized, making them more prone to dryness and chapping. Environmental factors like cold weather, wind, and sun exposure can also contribute to chapped lips.
Lips are pink because the blood vessels appear through the thinner skin of the lips.
Skinned Lips are lips that are very dry and have dry skin peeling off of the top lip.
Yes, strange isn't it!
Our lips are redder than our palms due to a higher concentration of blood vessels and a thinner layer of skin on the lips. The skin on the lips lacks the protective outer layer of dead skin cells found on the palms, allowing the underlying blood vessels to show through more prominently. Additionally, the pigmentation of the skin on the lips is generally lighter than that on the palms, further enhancing their red appearance.
People have lips to help with speaking, eating, and expressing emotions. Lips also protect the mouth and help maintain moisture in the lips and surrounding skin.
Skin, muscle tissue, collagen