The same as it does on even days of the year!
It takes about 17 muscles to smile and 43 to frown
It take more facial muscles to frown than to smile.
43 "muscles" are used to frown...I'm not aware of bones used to frown
It takes 43 muscles to frown, but only 17 to smile.
It takes 43 muscles to frown and only 17 to smile. So smile!
17 to smile 43 to frown Me and my friend Rasheed Boyd had it correct
There are 33 muscles in a human face. And no, it doesn't take more muscles to frown than to smile.
It was claimed by ( Be Happy) types it takes Five muscles to smile (not laugh) and 37 to frown- conserve energy!
ask jeeves i dont know :S
Some claim it takes 43 muscles to frown and 17 to smile, but open Aunt Milda's chain letter and you might be surprised to learn it takes 26 to smile and 62 to frown. And some naysayers claim it's quite the opposite, that in fact it takes more muscles to smile than to frown.
It takes approximately 43 muscles to frown. This involves the contraction of various facial muscles, including those around the forehead, eyes, and mouth. In contrast, smiling generally requires fewer muscles, around 17, which is why it is often said that it takes more effort to frown than to smile.
There's a stupid saying to the effect that "it takes X muscles to frown, but only Y muscles to smile", where Y is always smaller than X (though the actual numbers themselves vary).The reason it's a stupid saying is that nobody really knows how "many" muscles it takes to smile or frown because the number depends on exactly how you define "muscles", "smile", and "frown". This is also part of why the numbers vary (another part of it is that the people that come up with these sorts of sayings generally have almost no idea what they're talking about, and just pull numbers out of their ... er, the air).There's a somewhat more clever variant that ends "but it doesn't take any to just sit there with a dumb look on your face."