Nah, the shoulder connects the arm to the torso. :P And don't get me wrong here. I wasn't referring to a Danbooru style implication.
I know that's nitpicking, but please take a look at post #2002351.
I know you'll find these images. I was only talking about the normal results.
And no, the shoulder doesn't connect the arm and the torso (well it does connect though), but the shoulder is part of the arm (like the feet are part of the legs)
And no, the shoulder doesn't connect the arm and the torso (well it does connect though), but the shoulder is part of the arm [...]
<_<
Okay, let's just say the shoulder is part arm and part torso.
Wikipedia states:
The human shoulder is made up of three bones: the clavicle (collarbone), the scapula (shoulder blade), and the humerus (upper arm bone) as well as associated muscles, ligaments and tendons.
[...] (like the feet are part of the legs)
Yes, the feet can be seen as part of the leg, but there are also two (or maybe more) cases to consider here:
What I am trying to tell you is that the bare_shoulder and barefoot tags will NOT contain redundant information, even if the bare_arms and bare_legs tags are present respectively.
May I ask what the storefront tag is about. I wanted to create a request "imply storefront -> shop" since store is aliased to shop. But what is a storefront refering to in English? Does it only apply to shops or also to things like restaurants?
Yes, that is clear. But the question is: Is it only reduced to things like shops or also other facilities that I wouldn't neccessarily call a shop, like restaurants.
splashing In this wiki, it is only water that is mentioned or specified. But does "splashing" apply in English language also to other liquids or only to water?
pale color and muted color say that dark is the tag for images which use colors that are heavily mixed with black. But the dark wiki says it's for poorly lit surroundings. Which is it?
(Maybe we should change the "blackish colors" tag to dark_color or something)
I'm not qualified to write the wiki page, but if you need a definition now, topic #11794 is where the tag was created, and topic #12900 has some further discussion