[
UK
/njˈuːdɪti/
]
[ US /ˈnudɪti/ ]
[ US /ˈnudɪti/ ]
NOUN
- the state of being without clothing or covering of any kind
How To Use nudity In A Sentence
- The UK is more relaxed about televising full-frontal female nudity.
- But others of the Muscovite band were fond of congregating at this spot and hour for their lustral summer rites -- white-skinned lads and lasses, matrons and reverent elders, all in a state of Adamitic nudity, splashing about the water of this sunny cover, devouring raw fish and crabs after the manner of the fabled Ichthyophagi, laughing, kissing, saying nice things about God, and combing out each other's long tow-coloured hair. South Wind
- It was the first show to use the F-word and show nudity on stage.
- What struck me most, after this long passage of time, is what we deem “permissible” on the screen today: We can — with impunity — rape, skewer, torture, vilify, scarify, plunge fangs into carotid arteries, sodomize…women can reveal frontal nudity within a half-inch of genitalia; men can stand frontally nude with only a hand cupped over the thingy…but only frontal. Buzzine » Tushy Tarts, Smelly Farts…
- It seems that nudity is causing outrage again, this time in Wales.
- These days, with long lines, invasive x-rays requiring near-nudity, constant delays, smaller, more crowded planes and the threat of terrorism, the flying experience is frustrating and challenging enough without some buffoon sitting next to me making the flight even more unpleasant. Andy Ostroy: Ostroy's List of Air-Travel Don'ts
- They launched ‘Revuedeville’ - a nonstop round of showgirls, variety acts and comedians - and when other theatres copied them she hit on the idea of nudity.
- They are strong, redolent of the dignity of human life, and contrary to many images of female nudity.
- The committee claimed that there was too much nudity on television.
- Elia Kazan's adaptation of Tennessee Williams' Baby Doll is quite possibly the steamiest, dirtiest film that doesn't have a single moment of nudity or a directly sexual line of dialogue. Films I Love #18: Baby Doll (Elia Kazan, 1956)