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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Soul_patchSoul patch - Wikipedia

    A soul patch, also known as a mouche, [1] is a single small patch of facial hair just below the lower lip and above the chin. Soul patches have been fashionable in Europe at various times in the past, for instance in 17th-century Holland (though the term "soul patch" itself is more recent).

  2. The earliest known use of the noun mouche is in the late 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for mouche is from 1676, in the writing of Richard Wiseman, surgeon.

  3. Mar 16, 2018 · French mouches became popular with both men and women by the 1700s. At the time, it was popular to have pale, milky white skin, and women liked mouches because they enhanced the radiance of their skin and brought out their skin’s whiteness. Men liked them too and used them to hide defects, but they wore fewer in number than women.

  4. The wearing of cosmetics first emerged as a status symbol. The heavy application of makeup was associated with court circles, particularly in France. By the mid-eighteenth century, its use...

  5. Jun 8, 2024 · Mouches or Patches © Wellcome Library. Also referred to as a mouche or fly (insect) by the French, the beauty spot was a very small, often distinctively shaped fabric patch that was applied to the face or exposed upper body, and was solely applied for the purpose of inviting attention.

  6. Aug 19, 2024 · mouche (plural mouches) A soul patch, especially in a historical (pre-modern) context. They lent him a worn aspect which not even a fiercely erect little mustache and a tiny. Figurative terra-cotta revetments in etruria and Latium: in the VI. and V. centuries B.C.

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  8. Mouche is first recorded in the Académie Universelle des Jeux of 1718, although Parlett implies that, from its terminology, it ought to be an ancestor of the English game, Lanterloo, which goes back at least to Cotton's rules of 1674, and that they are probably both descended from an early trump game, known as Triomphe. [2]