different between arousal vs eroticism

arousal

English

Etymology

arouse +? -al

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???a?z?l/
  • Rhymes: -a?z?l

Noun

arousal (plural arousals)

  1. The act of arousing or the state of being aroused.
    bodily arousal
    emotional arousal
    to influence the arousal of brain and behavior
  2. Sexual arousal.
    Some people get sexual arousal from the depiction of feet.
  3. A physiological and psychological state of being awake or reactive to stimuli, including elevated heart rate and blood pressure and a condition of sensory alertness, mobility and readiness to respond.
    • 2003, Jinhee Choi, "Fits and Startles: Cognitivism Revisited," The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, vol. 61, no. 2 (Spring), p. 152,
      Subjects report the physiological arousals induced by adrenaline and placebo differently.
  4. Arousal from sleep or hibernation.
    the mechanism for arousal from sleep
    the animal undergoes regular spells of arousal

Synonyms

  • (sexual arousal): horniness
  • (state of being reactive to stimuli): alertness
  • (arousal from sleep): wakefulness

Translations

arousal From the web:

  • what arousal means
  • what arousal in sport
  • what arousal does to the brain
  • what's arousal fluid
  • what arousal mean in arabic
  • what arousal disorder means
  • what arousal disorder
  • what's arousal index


eroticism

English

Etymology

erotic +? -ism

Noun

eroticism (usually uncountable, plural eroticisms)

  1. the state of being erotic, or of being sexually aroused
  2. sexual excitement, especially if abnormally persistent

Translations

Anagrams

  • isometric, meroistic, microsite

eroticism From the web:

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