Overweight

having a body mass index of 25.0–29.9 kg/m2

Being overweight (colloquially "fat") is having more body fat than is optimally healthy. Being overweight is especially common where food supplies are plentiful and lifestyles are sedentary.

Con: You're endangering your health. Pro: I'm drought and famine resistant.
She is spherical, like a globe. I could find out countries in her.
Who's your fat friend?

Quotes

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  • Laugh and grow fat.
    • English saying, reported in Ballou's Pictorial Drawing-Room Companion, vol. 8, no. 17 (28 April 1855), p. 259, col. 3
  • You think, because you're old and obese,
    To find in the furry civic robe ease?
  • Fat is an oily dropsy.
    • Lord Byron to James Smith, quoted in The Albion, vol. 1, no. 31 (3 August 1833), p. 248
  • It is very injurious to health to take in more food than the constitution will bear, when, at the same time one uses no exercise to carry off this excess.
  • When you wish to laugh, you shall find me fat and sleek, with well-tended hide, a hog of Epicurus' herd.
    • Horace, Epistles, I, iv, as translated by M. F. Masom and A. F. Watt (1905)
  • I'm fat, but I'm thin inside. Has it ever struck you that there is a thin man inside every fat man, just as they say there's a statue inside every block of stone?
  • Persons of a gross relaxed habit of body, the flabby, and red-haired, ought always to use a drying diet. Such as are fat, and desire to be lean, should use exercise fasting; should drink small liquors a little warm; should eat only once a day, and no more than will just satisfy their hunger.
    • Polybus, as translated by James Mackenzie in The History of Health (1759), p. 130
  • Dromio of Syracuse: ... I have but lean luck in the match, and yet is she a wondrous fat marriage.
    Antipholus of Syracuse: How dost thou mean a “fat marriage”?
    Dromio of Syracuse: Marry, sir, she’s the kitchen wench, and all grease, and I know not what use to put her to but to make a lamp of her and run from her by her own light. I warrant her rags and the tallow in them will burn a Poland winter. If she lives till doomsday, she’ll burn a week longer than the whole world.
    Antipholus of Syracuse: What complexion is she of?
    Dromio of Syracuse: Swart like my shoe, but her face nothing like so clean kept. For why? she sweats, a man may go overshoes in the grime of it.
    Antipholus of Syracuse: That’s a fault that water will mend.
    Dromio of Syracuse: No, sir, ’tis in grain; Noah’s flood could not do it.
    Antipholus of Syracuse: What’s her name?
    Dromio of Syracuse: Nell, sir; but her name and three quarters, that’s an ell and three quarters, will not measure her from hip to hip.
    Antipholus of Syracuse: Then she bears some breadth?
    Dromio of Syracuse: No longer from head to foot than from hip to hip. She is spherical, like a globe. I could find out countries in her.
  • There is a devil haunts thee in the likeness of an old fat man; a tun of man is thy companion.
  • Enclosing every thin man, there's a fat man demanding elbow-room.

See also

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Wikipedia
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