Unibrow

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File:Unibrow Close Up.jpg
Close up of a unibrow

A unibrow (or monobrow; called synophrys in medicine) is a single eyebrow created when the two eyebrows meet in the middle above the bridge of the nose.[1] The hair above the bridge of the nose is of the same color and thickness as the eyebrows, such that they converge to form one uninterrupted line of hair.

History

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The word monobrow first appeared in print in 1968,[2] and the adjectival form monobrowed followed in 1973, in Martin Amis' novel The Rachel Papers.[3] The first known use of the word unibrow was in 1981.[4]

Culture and beauty

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File:Sharipov.jpg
Kyrgyz Cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov

Some nations prize the unibrow. It is a sign of beauty among Baluchi Omanis, whose women sometimes draw a black line joining the brows as a part of their routine makeup to fake a unibrow. A study found the prevalence of synophrys to be at 11.87% in the Omani population.[5] In Tajikistan, where the unibrow is similarly viewed as attractive, some women dry and extract an herb known locally as usma and daub it onto their brows to mimic one.[6] Urban women may do the same with a kohl liner or a kajal pen.[7]

File:The 6th Duke of Westminster Allan Warren.jpg
Gerald Grosvenor, 6th Duke of Westminster
File:Brian MacDonell (cropped).jpg
New Zealand politician Brian MacDonell

The unibrow has largely been seen as undesirable in the Americas and Europe, with the hairs often plucked, shaved, or waxed away.[8][9] Exceptions include the artist Frida Kahlo, famous for her unibrow, which she often depicted in self-portraits,[10][11] and the Greek-Cypriot model Sophia Hadjipanteli.[12]

The unibrow is also the trademark of the NBA player Anthony Davis,[13] the football player Marouane Fellaini, and the YouTuber ElectroBOOM. The boxer Roberto Elizondo famously sported a unibrow during his professional career.[14]

Medicine

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Genetics

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The unibrow is a genetic trait[15] associated with the PAX3 gene; rare mutations of PAX3 have been shown to cause Waardenburg syndrome type 1 (85% of patients with this condition have a unibrow).[16]

Medical conditions

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A unibrow is part of normal human variation, but can also stem from developmental disorders. A unibrow is a recognized feature of Cornelia De Lange syndrome, a genetic disorder whose main features include moderate to severe learning difficulties, limb abnormalities such as oligodactyly (fewer than normal fingers or toes), and phocomelia (malformed limbs), and facial abnormalities including a long philtrum (the slight depression/line between the nose and mouth).

Other medical conditions associated with a unibrow include:[17]

File:De Lange Syndrome 3.jpg
Unibrow in Cornelia de Lange syndrome
File:Amentia Plate XX (2).jpg
Hydrocephalic man with a unibrow
File:Mucopolysaccharidosis (Sanfilippo Syndrome) 1.jpg
Unibrow in MPS-III

See also

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References

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  • Error creating thumbnail: File missing Media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 62: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). at Wikimedia Commons

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