Dictionary Definition
navel
Noun
2 the center point or middle of something [syn:
navel
point]
User Contributed Dictionary
Homophones
Noun
- The indentation or bump remaining in the abdomen of mammals where the umbilical cord was attached before birth.
Synonyms
- belly button italbrac colloquial
- umbilicus
Derived terms
Translations
remnant of umbilical cord
- Albanian: kërthizë
- Bosnian: pupak
- Catalan: melic , llombrígol
- Chichewa: mchombo
- Chinese: 脐 (qí)
- Croatian: pupak
- Czech: pupek
- Danish: navle
- Dutch: navel
- Esperanto: umbiliko
- Estonian: naba
- Fijian: vico
- Finnish: napa
- French: ombilic
- Galician: embigo
- German: Bauchnabel, Nabel
- Hawaiian: piko
- Hindi: नाभि (nābhi)
- Hungarian: köldök
- Icelandic: nafli
- Ilocano: puseg
- Indonesian: pusat, pusar
- Italian: ombelico , (unusual) onfalo
- Japanese: 臍 (へそ, heso)
- Korean: 배꼽 (baeggop)
- Kurdish: navik
- Latin: umbilicus
- Macedonian: папук
- Maori: pito
- Persian: (nâf)
- Polish: pępek
- Portuguese: umbigo
- Romanian: buric
- Russian: пупок
- Sanskrit: नाभि (nābhi)
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic: пупак
- Roman: pupak
- Cyrillic: пупак
- Spanish: ombligo
- Swahili: kitovu (noun 7/8)
- Swedish: navel
- Tamil: தொப்புள் (toppul)
- Telugu: బొడ్డు (boDDu)
- Ukrainian: пупок
- Urdu: (nābhi) , (nāf)
Dutch
Pronunciation
Noun
Swedish
Noun
Extensive Definition
The navel (also called an umbilicus or,
colloquially, belly button) is a scar on the abdomen, caused when the
umbilical
cord is removed from a newborn baby. All placental
mammals have a navel.
While it is fairly conspicuous in humans, in most mammals it appears
only as a thin hairless line.
In humans, the scar can appear as a depression
(often referred to as an innie) or as a protrusion (outie).
Although they can be separated into these two categories, navels
actually vary quite drastically among people in terms of size,
shape, depth/length, and overall appearance. As navels are
essentially scars, and not in any way defined by genetics, they can serve as a
way of distinguishing between identical twins in the absence of other
identifiable marks.
Human anatomy
This section focuses on externally-visible aesthetics of the navel in human anatomy. Information regarding fetal circulation -- how oxygenated blood and nutrients are absorbed by a fetus from the umbilical cord -- may be found under umbilical vein and umbilical artery, both of which are umbilical vessels.The umbilicus is an important landmark on the
abdomen since its position is relatively consistent among humans.
The skin around the waist at the level of the umbilicus is
supported by the tenth thoracic spinal nerve
(T10 dermatome). The
umbilicus itself lies at the level between L3/L4 vertebrae.
The reason for the occurrence of an outie is
extra skin left from the umbilical cord or umbilical
hernias, although a child with an umbilical hernia will not
necessarily develop an outie. As well as the visible depression on
a person's abdomen, the underlying abdominal-muscle layers also
present a concavity; thinness at this point contributes to a
relative structural weakness, making it susceptible to hernia. During pregnancy, the uterus presses the navel of the
pregnant woman
outward. It usually retracts after birth.
The umbilicus is also used to visually separate
the abdomen into quadrants. The navel comes in the center of the
circle enclosing the spread-eagle
figure in Leonardo
da Vinci's Vitruvian
Man, his famous drawing on human proportions. This illustrates
the principle that in the shift between the spread-eagle pose and
the straight pose, the apparent center of the figure seems to move,
but in reality, the navel of the figure, which is the true center of
gravity, remains motionless.
The height at which navels are located on the
abdomen is variable. An ideal proportion of navel height versus
body height is said to be based on the Golden
Section, also known as the "Divine Proportion" by philosophers
and artists. This is a geometric proportion in which a line is
divided so that the ratio of the length of the longer line segment
to the length of the entire line is equal to the ratio of the
length of the shorter line segment to the length of the longer line
segment. This Golden Section ratio has a numerical value of
approximately 1.618. In other words, an ideal navel height is about
62% of the body height and is said to exhibit special beauty as the
legs and torso appear in
sound proportion.
Fashion
Fashion sometimes exploits the navel through clothing that leaves part of the lower abdomen (i.e., the midriff) bare, a usage that is much more common for women than for men. Displaying a bare navel has been and still is a taboo in certain Western cultures since the sheath-like appearance of the navel (especially of an 'innie') has erotic overtones. For example, in the 1960s, Barbara Eden was not allowed to show her navel on the TV show I Dream of Jeannie.The modern trend of exposing the navel has
usually been confined to women, aside from a male belly-button
shirt fad in 1980s
fashion (men usually bare their navels only when they take
their shirts off entirely). While the West was more resistant to
midriff-baring dresses until the 1980s, Indian women have
traditionally worn saris
that usually expose the navel as the blouse/choli that is worn with it is
intentionally kept short. In Indian culture, exposure of the navel
is not considered a taboo and has, in fact, long been accepted as a
graceful identifying mark of a married woman. A dimpled navel is
considered a special asset of any prospective bride especially
amongst South Indian
women and an important quality of any budding Bollywood actress.
Other Indian communities that take navels in their stride include
the Rajasthanis and
Gujaratis,
whose women leave the midriff exposed while wearing short cholis
with traditional gypsy skirts. However, these women cover their
heads with a 'chador' and even cover their faces in front of
strangers, which lends credence to the belief that navel-baring in
India has a symbolic, almost mystical, association with birth and
life and that the display is meant to emphasise the centrality of
nature in the nurture role.
Along with the acceptance of navel display in
Western societies, navel
piercing is becoming common among young women. Short shirts to
expose navels are also often worn to expose lower
back tattoos or stomach/navel tattoos, which are popular among
young women.
Sexuality
The navel's transfiguration from a vestigial
fetal feeding tube to a woman's erotic appendage can be ascertained
from the attention it gets, ranging from men's casual stares to
more intimate prodding. Navels can be the focus of sexual
fetishism, especially among males. While cleavage
of the breasts is
certainly meant to display feminine charms and has a risqué,
"turn-on" appeal, a navel is considered, in equal parts, an
innocent emblem of femininity as much as an object of sexual
appeal. This attitude towards the navel (in contrast with breast
cleavage) is shown in the hit '60's cult situation comedy Gilligan's
Island. In Gilligan's Island, Ginger, the sexy movie star,
often displays cleavage, but very rarely shows her navel, whereas
Mary Ann, who's more the ingenue type, does sometimes show her
navel, but does not show cleavage.
In the Song of
Solomon, the book of Old Testament, there are allusions to
exotic things in nature, with frequent interweaving of nature with
erotic imagery. The navel figures in Solomon's lavish praise of his
love (the country girl, Sulaimi) thus: "thy navel is like a round
goblet, which wanteth not liquor"(7:2).
The modern-day Deirdre Day-MacLeod describes the
navel's appeal thus: "Neither procreative nor nutritive, perhaps it
is the navel's lack of obvious purpose, combined with its
audacious, almost arrogant, spot right there in the middle of
things, that sucks its admirers in."http://www.identitytheory.com/nonfiction/day_navel.php
Other meanings
- The word "navel", or its equivalent in other languages, has been used sometimes for the center of something, e.g., "nave" of a wheel.
- Tortellini might represent the belly button of Venus, the Goddess of Love in Roman mythology (Aphrodite in Greek mythology).
See also
- Abdominal hair
- Granuloma
- Navel lint
- Navel fetishism
- Omphaloskepsis
- Omphalos
- Umbilicoplasty or Belly Button Surgery
navel in Arabic: سرة
navel in Aymara: Kururu
navel in Catalan: Melic
navel in Pennsylvania German: Nawwel
navel in German: Bauchnabel
navel in Modern Greek (1453-): Ομφαλός
navel in Spanish: Ombligo
navel in Esperanto: Umbiliko
navel in French: Ombilic
navel in Korean: 배꼽
navel in Indonesian: Pusar
navel in Italian: Ombelico
navel in Hebrew: טבור
navel in Latin: Umbilicus
navel in Lingala: Litɔlú
navel in Dutch: Navel
navel in Japanese: へそ
navel in Norwegian: Navle
navel in Norwegian Nynorsk: Navle
navel in Polish: Pępek
navel in Portuguese: Umbigo
navel in Sicilian: Viddicu
navel in Simple English: Umbilicus
navel in Finnish: Napa (anatomia)
navel in Swedish: Navel
navel in Tagalog: Pusod
navel in Turkish: Göbek (anatomi)
navel in Chinese: 肚脐