Full, well-developed lips are among the most expressive facial features and among the most studied in physiognomy. The lips are the primary zone of expression and verbal communication, their shape, fullness, and quality speak to how a person gives and receives in the world.
Full, well-developed lips are among the most expressive facial features and among the most studied in physiognomy. The lips are the primary zone of expression and verbal communication, their shape, fullness, and quality speak to how a person gives and receives in the world.
What does full lips mean in physiognomy?
In physiognomy, full lips indicate a generous, expressive, and sensory-oriented nature. The fullness of the lips corresponds to the fullness of expression: these are people who feel deeply, express freely, and experience life through the senses with greater intensity than most. In Chinese mianxiang, full lips are associated with wealth, abundance, and a generous spirit that naturally attracts good fortune. Western physiognomists associated full lips with warmth, communicative ability, and an appreciation for the pleasures of life.
In physiognomy, full lips indicate warmth, expressiveness, sensory richness, and generosity of spirit. Full-lipped people tend to be warm communicators who experience and express emotion freely.
What do full lips say about personality?
Full lips indicate passion, emotional generosity, sensuality, and expressiveness in physiognomy. They suggest someone who gives and receives emotional energy openly and relates warmly to sensory experience.
Are full lips a sign of warmth?
Yes. In physiognomy, full lips are strongly associated with emotional warmth, generosity, and openness. They are commonly found in Dolphin and Bear archetypes, both known for nurturing, warm personalities.
What does lip shape reveal in face reading?
Lip shape reveals communication style and emotional expression. Full lips suggest warmth, thin lips suggest precision and self-control, a pronounced cupid's bow indicates artistic sensitivity, and downturned corners suggest discernment.
Marcus Cyrus
Founder of Attainment. Drawing on primary sources from the classical physiognomy tradition (Aristotle, Lavater, della Porta) and contemporary face perception research (Todorov, Zebrowitz).