Thỏ non ngơ ngác. |
Thế này mà vẫn chưa được à. Phải làm sao bây giờ? |
Hình như mặt em hơi bẩn. |
Ê!. Nhìn này. |
Thích “chiến” không? |
Đừng có chụp chị em tôi. |
Này màu đen đen, chấm thêm vàng vàng. |
Nói to lên. Không nghe thấy gì đâu. |
Thư giãn. |
Đăm chiêu. |
Buôn chuyện. |
Nhìn mặt lão chụp ảnh buồn cười thế! |
Convoy và em mới là nhất. |
Because female fecundity typically declines after the late twenties, youth is an important aspect of physical attractiveness.[39] One study across 37 cultures showed men desire, on average, a woman 2.5 years younger than themselves for a wife, with men in Nigeria and Zambia at the far extreme, desiring their wives to be 6.5 to 7.5 years younger. As men age, they also desire a larger age gap from their mates.[29] The reasons for this preference are currently debated.
This preference for youth has also led to a preference of neotenic and youthful-appearing features. High, firm breasts,[40][41] fair or long and lustrous hair (or a combination of the three),[29][40][42][43][44] full red lips,[45][46][47] clear smooth skin, and clear eyes, are viewed as attractive in women.[29]
[edit] Breast size
Full breasts may be attractive to men in Western societies because women with higher breast to under-breast ratios typically have higher levels of the sex hormone, estradiol, which promotes fertility.[48] Larger breasts also display the aging process more noticeably, hence they are a relatively reliable indicator of long-term fertility.[49]
[edit] Proportion of body mass to body structure
Social ideals of body proportions can change. This 1895 advertisement promotes a weight gain product.
The Body Mass Index (BMI) is another important universal determinant to the perception of beauty.[33] The BMI refers to the proportion of the body mass to the body structure. However, the optimal body proportion is interpreted differently in various cultures. The Western ideal considers a slim and slender body mass as optimal while many historic cultures consider an embonpoint or plump body-mass as appealing.[50][51] Men do not appear to have evolved to hold a particular build as more attractive, but rather to be drawn to whichever build associates with social status.[51]
In the United States, women overestimate men's preferences for thinness in a mate. In one study, American women were asked to choose what their ideal build was and what they thought the build most attractive to men was. Women chose slimmer than average figures for both choices, though when American men were independently asked to choose the female build most attractive to them, they (the men) chose figures of average build, indicating that women may be misled as to how thin men prefer women to be.[51] Some speculate that thinness as a beauty standard is one way in which women judge each other.[38] A reporter asked: "Why do women suffer to look like skeletons even when men don’t want them to?" and wondered whether "women's aesthetic judgments are so influenced by other women."[38] The reporter surmised that thinness is prized among women as a "sign of independence, strength and achievement."[38] Some blame the fashion industry from pushing an "unnatural thinness" with "waiflike models who paraded down the catwalk" and that these unattainable and dangerous examples of slimness could be harmful to young, impressionable women.[52] There is speculation that some beauty standards for thinness are harmful to women since they encourage extreme dieting; in one instance, a Ralph Lauren advertisement of a model was digitally altered to make her hips appear thinner than her head, and the distorted image caused controversy about whether the thin-beauty standard was false and harmful.[53]
The attraction for a proportionate body also influences an appeal for erect posture.[54]
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