Skip to main content

sensualness

/sen-shoo-al-i-tee/US // ˌsɛn ʃuˈæl ɪ ti //UK // (ˌsɛnsjʊˈælɪtɪ) //

感性,感性认识,感性的,色相

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural sen·su·al·i·ties.

    • : sensual nature: the sensuality of Keats's poetry.
    • : unrestrained indulgence in sensual pleasures.
    • : lewdness; unchastity.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • We meet Linda—played as a beautiful mess of innocence, impulsivity and sensuality by Lily James—in a flash-forward that successfully distances the miniseries from any connotation of stiffness we might associate with British period dramas.

  • On the surface, it lyrically encompassed sexuality and sensuality in an intriguing manner.

  • The premise comes and goes, however, and even the rest of “Clouds” focuses more on sensuality than sci-fi.

  • His photographs major on legs, lips, sensuality of the female form?

  • No historian, biographer, or myth-maker such as Carl Sandberg has ever written about his sensuality.

  • We can feel her sensuality and willfulness in the first daguerreotype we have of Mary, taken in 1846, when she was twenty-seven.

  • This maternal sensuality, she adds, is in no way an attempt to sexualize her children or herself.

  • Baudelaire had, in the matter of perfumes, a strangely subtle sensuality which is rarely to be met with except amongst Orientals.

  • In the intervals of his serious labors Napoleon gave way to a life of sensuality, and the women were prodigal of their charms.

  • I no longer habitually cherish physical sloth and luxury, which excite to excessive sensuality.

  • In some of the faces that passed him he saw only a careless sensuality brightened by the flush of excitement.

  • He never lost the veneration of his countrymen,--and no veneration can last for a man steeped in sensuality.