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Axilla
Underarm of a male human
Deep muscles of the chest and front of the arm, with the boundaries of the axilla.
Underarm hair usually grows in the underarms of both females and males, beginning in adolescence.
In modern Western culture, it is common for women to remove underarm hair for aesthetic reasons, while men tend to keep it. Throughout the feminist movement, previously in the hippie culture, and in some areas of the punk rock scene, some women choose to keep their underarm hair for a variety of reasons, from subversion to egalitarianism to comfort.
Recently, many men in the U.S. and Europe have begun to remove underarm hair due to popularization by hairless male models and athletes, and thinking it is embarrassing if they show it when wearing a sleeveless shirt.[citation needed]
Body odor
Body odor develops in the underarms due in part to the waste products of microorganisms that feed on sebum, the fatty secretions produced by apocrine glands.
A wide variety of deodorant and antiperspirant products are sold for the purpose of mitigating this odour.
Cultural significance
The underarms are among the locations in the human body which are most vulnerable to tickling.
The sexual attraction to the underarms is called axillism.
Terminology
The term oxter, pronounced 'ock-ster' is most often used in Scotland,[4] northern England, and Ireland. Northern Ireland generally replaces all other names of underarm for oxter.
The term "underarm" only refers to the outer surface of the axilla.[5] However, the terms are sometimes used interchangeably in casual contexts.
Colloquially, armpit refers to an object or place which is smelly, greasy or otherwise undesirable.[6]
Additional images
References
^ ab Anaesthesia UK :�AnaesthesiaUK: Applied anatomy for upper limb blocks. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
^ abcd LAB #4 PECTORAL REGION & Introduction to the Axilla. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
^ ab Dissector Answers - Axilla and Arm. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
^ BBC - Voices - Multilingual Nation. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.