adjective 1. being without clothing or covering; nude: naked children swimming in the lake. 2. without adequate clothing: a naked little beggar. 3. bare of any covering, overlying matter, vegetation, foliage, or the like: naked fields. 4. bare, stripped, or destitute (usually fol. by of): The trees were suddenly naked of leaves. 5. without the customary covering, container, or protection: a naked sword; a naked flame. 6. without carpets, hangings, or furnishings, as rooms or walls. 7. (of the eye, sight, etc.) unassisted by a microscope, telescope, or other instrument: visible to the naked eye. 8. defenseless; unprotected; exposed: naked to invaders. 9. plain; simple; unadorned: the naked realities of the matter. 10. not accompanied or supplemented by anything else: a naked outline of the facts.11. exposed to view or plainly revealed: the naked threat in the letter; a naked vein of coal. 12. plain-spoken; blunt: the naked truth. 13. Law. unsupported, as by authority or consideration: a naked promise. 14. Botany. a. (of seeds) not enclosed in an ovary. b. (of flowers) without a calyx or perianth. c. (of stalks, branches, etc.) without leaves. d. (of stalks, leaves, etc.) without hairs or pubescence. 15. Zoology. having no covering of hair, feathers, shell, etc With no shirts or some times pants and under wear. That is called Nude or Naked.
Without clothing or exposed.
No, the word 'naked' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: the naked truth; a naked toddler; a naked light bulb, etc.
12th century: Old English nacod, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch naakt and German nackt, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin nudus and Sanskrit nagna.
naked feminin term
Exhibitionist
naked tellytubies
Gymnos means 'naked'
Naked self-interest refers to pursuing one's own individual advantage or benefit without regard to the impact on others or ethical concerns. It involves a pure focus on personal gain or profit, often at the expense of others or without considering broader consequences.
Gymnastics came from the greek word "Gymnos" which means naked
Gross, such as gross anatomy. It means to see with the naked eye or without aide of a microscope.
It came from the Greek word gymnasion which was a place for exercising. The root word gymnos means "naked."
The Greek word gymnos means "naked", so literally a gymnasium is a place where people are naked, even though we wear uniforms or gym clothes today
No, the word 'naked' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: the naked truth; a naked toddler; a naked light bulb, etc.
Songs that have the word naked in them
It's both, the term butt naked is derived from the term buck naked. The term buck naked came from the word ''buckskin'' which means naked skin) However butt naked is a mispronunciation of buck naked. So, essentially buck naked came first, butt naked was used later.
12th century: Old English nacod, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch naakt and German nackt, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin nudus and Sanskrit nagna.
Nagasuka is the word naked in Korean.
The word derives from the Greek (gymnastike), fem. of (gymnastikos), "fond of athletic exercises"[1], from (gymnasia), "exercise"[2] and that from (gymnos), "naked"[3], because athletes exercised and competed in the nude.So, it means "Naked Exercises".hope it helps