definition polished
A polished surface is a surface that is free of imperfections. A polished surface is one that does not have the appearance of rubbing, scratching, or marring. A perfect surface is a surface that is polished to a high degree of smoothness.
The definition of the word polished is “to have a smooth surface,” but it doesn’t mean smooth to the human eye. It means the surface is free from scratches. The definition of the word polished is “to have a smooth surface,” but that’s not what it means to the human eye.
A polished surface is one that has no imperfections. The idea that a polished surface is something that looks fine to the eye is not true. A polished surface is something that is free of scratches or other imperfections.
Just like a beautiful glass is a surface that has no imperfections, a polished surface is one that has no scratches or imperfections. A smooth surface is one with no imperfections. A smooth surface is in fact one that has no imperfections and there is no polish on it. A smooth surface is one that has no imperfections and there is no polish on it. A polished surface is one that has no imperfections and has no paint on it.
A polished surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A polished surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A polished surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A smooth surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A polished surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A smooth surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched.
The “polished” part of polished comes from the fact that it’s not scratchy. It’s the fact that the surface has no scratches. A polished surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A polished surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A smooth surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A smooth surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched.
A polished surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A polished surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A smooth surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched. A smooth surface is one with no scratches, not one that has been scratched.
I guess you could say that the final nail in the coffin for the nail polish analogy is that, like most other things in life, it’s still applicable, in that it applies and applies, but it’s not the sort of thing you really want to apply to the surface of your bathroom, or your bedroom, or your bathroom sink.
The nail polish analogy, I guess, applies here, since it shows us that we can apply polish to something and not it will apply to it. It could probably be argued that the nail polish analogy doesn’t apply at all because we can apply polish to something and not it will apply to it, but we have to apply the same nail polish to the same nail.