posture
pos·ture (pŏsʹchər)n. 1. a. A position of the body or of body parts: a sitting posture. b. An attitude; a pose: assumed a posture of angry defiance. 2. A characteristic way of bearing one's body; carriage: stood with good posture. 3. Relative placement or arrangement: the posture of the buildings on the land. 4. A stance or disposition with regard to something: “Those bases are essential to our military posture in the Middle East” (Gerard Smith). 5. A frame of mind affecting one's thoughts or behavior; an overall attitude.v. pos·tured, pos·tur·ing, pos·turesv. intr. 1. To assume an exaggerated or unnatural pose or mental attitude; attitudinize. 2. To assume a pose.v. tr. To put into a specific posture; pose. [French, from Italian postura, from Latin positūra, position, from positus, past participle of pōnere, to place. See apo- in Indo-European Roots.] posʹtur·al adj.posʹtur·er or posʹtur·ist n. Synonyms: posture, attitude, carriage, pose1, stance These nouns denote a position of the body and limbs: erect posture; an attitude of prayer; dignified carriage; a defiant pose; an athlete's alert stance.
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