About the use of "Skinny" in iStripper software
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June 7, 2017, 14 answers
@The Emu: Thanks for your insights. It led me to dig deeper into the matter, and I found some interesting nuances in the Cambridge dictionary:
"Probably the most commonly used adjective to describe someone who has too little fat is thin. ‘Thin’ is often used in a negative way: She’s very pretty but she’s too thin. Skinny, a slightly informal word, means very much the same: I don’t like his looks – he’s too skinny.
The above adjectives are generally negative, but there are as many adjectives to describe people who are thin in a way that is positive. Probably the most common of these is slim. If someone is slim they are quite thin in a way that is attractive: Charlotte was looking lovely and slim in the photos. Other synonyms for ‘slim’ have an extra meaning in addition to ‘having little fat’. Slender, for example, means ‘slim and graceful’: She was small and slender, like a dancer. Lean describes someone who is slim and strong: Long-distance runners are usually fairly lean. Petite, which is positive in tone, means ‘short and slim’ and is only used for women and girls."
End of quotation
https://dictionaryblog.cambridge.org/2012/05/07/body-shapes/
I saw somewhere else what you mean with the coupling of "tall and slender", even if the Cambridge dictionary doesn't do it.
So, shall we use "petite" to describe a small and slim woman and "slender" to describe a taller but equally one slim woman?