Actual Freedom – Definitions

Definitions

Amative; Amatory; Liaison

Libinosity; Libinous; Love

Lubricious


Amative:

amative (adj.): relating to or inclined toward love, especially sexual love; amorous⁽*⁾; (adv.): amatively; (n.): amativeness. [1630; Medieval Latin amātīvus, ‘capable of love’, from amātus, past participle of Latin amāre, ‘to love’]. ~ (American Heritage Dictionary).

⁽*⁾amorous (adj.): 1. feeling or devoted to sexual love or desire; (synonyms): amative, concupiscent, erotic, lascivious, lecherous, lewd, libidinous, lustful, lusty, passionate, prurient, sexy; 2. of, concerning, or promoting sexual love or desire; (synonyms): amatory, aphrodisiac, erotic, lascivious, salacious, sexual, sexy. ~ (American Heritage Roget’s Thesaurus).


Amatory:

• amatory (adj.): of, relating to, or inciting sexual love or desire; also called: amatorian or amatorious. [C16: from Latin amātōrius, from amāre, ‘to love’]. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).

• amatory (adj.): of or pertaining to lovers or lovemaking; expressive of love. [1590-1600; from Latin amātōrius; see amateur; viz.: from French, Middle French from Latin amātor, ‘lover’, from amā(re), ‘to love’ + -tory¹]. ~ (Webster’s College Dictionary).

• amatory (adj.): expressive of or exciting sexual love or romance; [e.g.]: “her amatory affairs”; (synonyms): amorous, romantic; [e.g.]: “her amorous glances”; “a romantic adventure”; “a romantic moonlight ride”; (related word): loving (feeling or showing love and affection; [e.g.]: “their loving parents”; “her loving glances”). ~ (Princeton’s WordNet 3.0).

• amatory (adj.): of, concerning, or promoting sexual love or desire; (synonyms): amorous, aphrodisiac, erotic, lascivious, salacious, sexual, sexy. ~ (The American Heritage Roget’s Thesaurus).

• amatory (adj.): of, relating to, or expressive of love, especially romantic love; [e.g.]: “an amatory mood”; “an amatory embrace”. [Latin amātōrius, from amātor, ‘lover’; see amateur; viz.: French, from Latin amātor, from amāre, ‘to love’]. ~ (American Heritage Dictionary).


Liaison:

liaison (n.): a sexual relationship, especially when at least one person is married or involved in a sexual relationship with someone else; (intr.v.): liasoned, liasoning, liaisons. [French, from Old French, from Latin ligātiō , ligātiōn-, from ligātus, past participle of ligāre, ‘to bind’]. ~ (American Heritage Dictionary).


Libidinosity:

libidinosity (n.): lustfulness. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).


Libidinous:

libidinous (adj.): “lustful”, mid-15th century, from Old French libidineus, ‘sinful, lusty’ (13th century, Modern libidineux) or directly from Latin libīdinosus, ‘full of desire’, ‘lustful’, from libīdō, “pleasure, desire, sensual passion, lust”; see libido[§]. Related: libidinously {=lustfully, lasciviously; lewdly}; libidinousness {=amativeness, amorousness; concupiscence}; libidinosity {=pruriency, lechery; lubricity}. *These are older in English than libido, libidinal* {libidinal=belonging to the libido; [e.g.]: “libidinal impulses”; “libidinal gratification”}, *which are from modern psychology*. [emphases and curly bracketed inserts added]. ~ (Online Etymology Dictionary).

[§]libido (n.): “psychic drive or energy, usually associated with sexual instinct”, *1892, carried over untranslated in English edition of Krafft-Ebing’s “Psychopathia Sexualis”*; and used in 1909 in A. A. Brill’s translation of Freud’s “Selected Papers on Hysteria” (Freud’s use of the term led to its popularity). [from Latin libīdō, ‘libido’: “desire, eagerness, longing; inordinate desire, sensual passion, lust”, from libēre, “to be pleasing, to please”]. [emphasis added]. ~ (Online Etymology Dictionary).


Love (Chemistry of Love):

‘Love can be distilled into three categories: lust, attraction, and attachment; though there are overlaps and subtleties to each, each type is characterised by its own set of hormones; testosterone and oestrogen drive lust; dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin create attraction; and oxytocin and vasopressin mediate attachment (...); the testes and ovaries secrete the sex hormones testosterone and oestrogen, driving sexual desire; dopamine, oxytocin, and vasopressin are all made in the hypothalamus, a region of the brain which controls many vital functions as well as emotion; lust and attraction shut off the prefrontal cortex of the brain, *which includes rational behaviour*...“. [emphasis added].

[https://sitn.hms.harvard.edu/flash/2017/love-actually-science-behind-lust-attraction-companionship/].


Lubricious

lubricious (adj.): 1. full of or displaying sexual desire; 2. sexually stimulating; salacious (adv.): lubriciously; (n.): lubriciousness. ~ (American Heritage Dictionary).


RETURN TO DEFINITIONS INDEX

RICHARD’S HOME PAGE

The Third Alternative

(Peace On Earth In This Life Time As This Flesh And Blood Body)

Here is an actual freedom from the Human Condition, surpassing Spiritual Enlightenment and any other Altered State Of Consciousness, and challenging all philosophy, psychiatry, metaphysics (including quantum physics with its mystic cosmogony), anthropology, sociology ... and any religion along with its paranormal theology. Discarding all of the beliefs that have held humankind in thralldom for aeons, the way has now been discovered that cuts through the ‘Tried and True’ and enables anyone to be, for the first time, a fully free and autonomous individual living in utter peace and tranquillity, beholden to no-one.

Richard's Text ©The Actual Freedom Trust: 1997-.  All Rights Reserved.

Disclaimer and Use Restrictions and Guarantee of Authenticity