At Last, A Labour Minister Allegedly...
Society & Culture2 mins ago
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http://dictionary.cambridge.org/define.asp?key=8980&dict=CALD
Looks like Bosom applies to both breasts and the term is often used when emotion is involved "She held him tightly to her bosom"
'Bosom,' 'breast,' and 'tit' (meaning teat) all date from Old English (although used in the biblical sense as well - Abrahams Bosom etc), before the Norman invasion of 1066. Calling the complete female breasts, especially well-developed ones, 'tits,' 'jugs' 'melons,' 'breastworks,' 'boobs,' 'boobies,' 'knobs,' 'bristols' and 'knockers' may be fairly old, but such words were seldom batted about widely until World War II, when pin-up pictures and the American male's 'breast fixation' made them a very popular part of the language. Many other slang terms(rather odd ones as well) here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_parts_slang#Breasts
As mentioned above, historically bosom was taken to mean 'the chest of a human' and the chest in this sense was considered as the source of emotion.
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