This separation takes place whenever, from a burn, or other cause, a blister is formed; a watery fluid is poured out between the two layers, and lifts the epidermis from the true skin.
The cutis, or true skin, lies beneath the epidermis, and is its origin and support.
The inner one is called the cutis, or true skin; the outer one is the epidermis, or scarf-skin.
The dermis, or true skin, is vascular and highly sensitive, containing the tactile ends of the nerves of touch.
In simple erythema the epidermis alone is affected; when it becomes chronic, fissures form and extend into the corium, or true skin.
Again the swelling is chiefly in the derm, or true skin, and we have what is known as a flesh wart (verucca carnea).
My true skin is covered with a jelly-like substance which gives color to my skin.
My true skin is elastic, and like a net-work of blood-vessels and nerves.
Hence they must necessarily have supposed, that, as the true skin was in every respect the same in all human subjects, however various their external hue, so the seat of colour must have existed in the Cuticle, or upper surface.
There is a watery infiltration from the minute capillaries and the surrounding tissues between the dermis and the epidermis, causing the latter to loosen and if touched to slip and tear away from the dermis or true skin.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "true skin" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.