Jive-inspired youth slang of the 1940s had a prodigious vocabulary to describe parts of the body (the frame), many based on the function of the body part. Top to bottom; stem to stern...

Hair: brush (a mustache), face lace (whiskers), moss.

The head: biscuit, dome, idea pot, noggin and think-box

The face: index, knob (an ugly face), map, phiz, puss.

Eyes: blinkers, lamps, pies, shutters (eye-lids), slanters, spotters.

Ears: flippers, flops, lugs (large ears), mikes, sails.

The nose: handle (a large nose), horn, schnozz, sneezer.

The mouth and environs: bone box (mouth), chewers (teeth), chops (jaws), choppers (teeth), crumb crunchers (teeth), snags (tonsils).

The neck: stretcher.
Shoulders and arms: brace o' broads (shoulders), brace o' hookers (arms), floppers (arms), hinges (elbows).

Hands: dukes (fists), grabbers, meat hooks, paddlers, paws.

Fingers: feelers, fish hooks, forks, hooks, pickers, stealers, wigglers.

The chest, abdomen and contents: bread basket (stomach), clocker (heart), pail (stomach), pump (heart), ticker (heart).

Legs: drumsticks, pillars, prayer dukes (knees), splits, stems, stumps, uprights.

Feet: hocks, plates.

Toes: ten (as in-it's good to have ten).