Sensuality
nature:
the sensuality of keats’s poetry.
unrestrained indulgence in pleasures.
lewdness; unchast-ty.
contemporary examples
the spring collection was intended to expound on the female body, sensuality and skin–but not nudity.
louis vuitton, chanel, mcqueen cap paris spring 2013 fashion week shows robin givhan october 2, 2012
it is in no way my job to embody an idealized form of beauty and sensuality.
angelina’s bold b–b move mich-lle cottle may 13, 2013
the premise comes and goes, however, and even the rest of “clouds” focuses more on sensuality than sci-fi.
prince returns from the wilderness and, thankfully, is as restless as ever keith phipps september 30, 2014
it was while working with the company on its sensuality, s-xuality, survival!
s-x after breast cancer debby herbenick phd october 17, 2011
my natural enthusiasm led me to try it all and discover my own quirky sense of sensuality.
confessions of a p-rn milf aurora snow august 8, 2010
historical examples
the books refer to the life of antony and cleopatra as being given over to sensuality, licentiousness, profligacy.
little journeys to the homes of the great, volume 7 elbert hubbard
for most of us the strain of sensuality in our loves is very strong.
the truth about woman c. gasquoine hartley
i had resisted, the allurements of sensuality and dissipation incident to my age.
edgar huntley charles brockden brown
an odour of luxury and sensuality floated through the apartment.
masterpieces of mystery various
worldliness, sensuality, and devilism are things helped forward by their gibberish.
gipsy life george smith
noun (pl) -ties
the quality or state of being sensual
excessive indulgence in sensual pleasures
n.
mid-14c., “the part of man that is concerned with the senses,” from old french sensualite “the five senses; impression,” from late latin sensualitatem (nominative sensualitas) “capacity for sensation,” from latin sensualis “endowed with feeling, sensitive,” from sensus “feeling” (see sense (n.)). chiefly “animal instincts and appet-tes,” hence “the lower nature regarded as a source of evil, l-sts of the flesh” (1620s).
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