(usually used in the plural) one of a pair of adhesive patches worn to cover the nipples of exotic dancers and striptease performers
<noun.artifact> [ adj ]
resembling paste in color; pallid
<adj.all> he looked pasty and red-eyed a complexion that had been pastelike was now chalky white
having the sticky properties of an adhesive
<adj.all>
Pasty \Pas"ty\, a. Like paste, as in color, softness, stickness. ``A pasty complexion.'' --G. Eliot.
Pasty \Pas"ty\, n.; pl. {Pasties}. [OF. past['e], F. p[^a]t['e]. See {Paste}, and cf. {Patty}.] A pie consisting usually of meat wholly surrounded with a crust made of a sheet of paste, and often baked without a dish; a meat pie. ``If ye pinch me like a pasty.'' --Shak. ``Apple pasties.'' --Dickens.
A large pasty baked in a pewter platter. --Sir W. Scott.
It has lobed edges, is extremely rough and probably flowed in a "thick, pasty" manner before it solidified, Saunders said.