Basically any word or short phrase I can think of to mean “a lot of muscle” also implies skinny or almost no fat. Fit, or lithe bring to mind more a track athlete’s body, and buff, ripped, jacked, muscular, ect. generally are though of more like a body builder. The closest thing I can think of is dad-bod but thats obviously still pretty far off as well as being male-specific. Is there even an English word for this?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    19
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    Stocky, stout, barrel-chested? I’d say “buff” would fit, too, it definitely allows more leeway for bodyfat content than words like “athletic” or “ripped”. Also just the good old “very strong”.

    “Dad-bod” seems like the worst of these, it can mean anything from “off-season bodybuilder” to “some guy who is kind of fat and isn’t particularly strong”.

  • teft
    link
    102 months ago

    Beefcake

  • @kameecoding
    link
    72 months ago

    The english word for it is power-lifter

  • @qarbone
    link
    English
    62 months ago

    “stout” is the first that comes to mind and isn’t immediately discarded. But because those other forms are so easy to call to mind I’d rather describe the power-lifter as they differ from those norms.

    “He was no body-builder. Powerful, yes, but he had traded aesthetics for even more strength. Muscles built upon muscles like layers of a brick house, and nearly as solid.”

  • @jpreston2005
    link
    62 months ago

    “built like a brick shit house”

    “Off-season body builder”

    “strongman”

    • Mayor Poopington
      link
      English
      32 months ago

      My friends and I like to say “built like a shit brick house”

  • @RBWells
    link
    52 months ago

    Fit and padded. I think if you call it a powerlifter build that’s a good description in itself.

    • PlzGivHugsOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      32 months ago

      Or sort phrase. The sort of thing you might introduce a minor character in a book with. Something that would fit in a phrase like, “He was a tall, buff man.”

      • @frankenswine
        link
        02 months ago

        i think you already have a bunch in the OP - just choose what fits best and add what will cancel misinterpretations of your words.

  • @ATDA
    link
    32 months ago

    Chonky. Not chunky, chonky.