darkoshi: (Default)
I wondered if there was a word for "the vertical indentation of skin under the center of the nose". Yes, Philtrum.

About 2 years ago when looking in the mirror, I started noticing that my philtrum looked narrower and/or deeper than it used to. It was more shadowed inside. The change was slightly disconcerting.

It may be related to aging. This page mentions philtrums getting longer as you age:
How your philtrum gives your age away

While searching for the word, I came across this interesting discussion:
https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/166884/what-is-the-name-of-the-area-of-skin-between-the-nose-and-the-upper-lip-mouth

It says that from an anatomical or medical sense, what I'd call the lips (or the upper and lower lip) is called vermilion, and the skin above and below those lips is called your upper and lower lip. So the terms "lip", "upper lip", and "lower lip" are ambiguous.

Per its etymology, philtrum originally meant "love charm".

Re: philtrum

Date: 2022-10-01 03:59 am (UTC)From: [personal profile] marahmarie
marahmarie: (M In M Forever) (Default)
Did you know the longer it is the smarter one supposedly is? And that if it's subtle or missing you can safely suspect fetal alcohol syndrome? TMYK

Re: philtrum

Date: 2022-10-01 03:36 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] marahmarie
marahmarie: (M In M Forever) (Default)
Wow, that list is as as long as my arm, never knew any diseases could cause it before.

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