different between lascivious vs ithyphallic
lascivious
English
Etymology
From Latin lasc?vi?sus, from lasc?via (“sportiveness, lustfulness”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /l??s?v??s/
Adjective
lascivious (comparative more lascivious, superlative most lascivious)
- Wanton; lewd, driven by lust, lustful.
- Sir, I will answer anything. But I beseech you, if't be your pleasure and most wise consent, as partly I find it is, that your fair daughter, at this odd-even and dull watch o'the night, transported with no worse nor better guard but with a knave of common hire, a gondolier, to the gross clasps of a lascivious Moor – if this be known to you, and your allowance, we then have done you bold and saucy wrongs; but if you know not this, my manners tell me we have your wrong rebuke.
- The colonel and his sponsor made a queer contrast: Greystone [the sponsor] long and stringy, with a face that seemed as if a cold wind was eternally playing on it. […] But there was not a more lascivious reprobate and gourmand in all London than this same Greystone.
Synonyms
- wanton, lewd, lustful
Related terms
Derived terms
- lasciviously
- lasciviousness
Translations
See also
- lecherous
Anagrams
- laviscious
lascivious From the web:
- what lasciviousness mean
- what lascivious behavior mean
- lasciviousness what does it mean
- what is lasciviousness in the bible
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- what does lascivious mean definition
ithyphallic
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin ithyphallicus, from Ancient Greek ??????????? (ithuphallikós), from ??????????? (?thúphallos, “phallus carried in festivals of Bacchus; ode sung in honour of the phallus; dance accompanying such an ode; dancer performing such a dance”) + -???? (-ikós, suffix forming adjectives meaning ‘of or pertaining to’). ??????????? is derived from ????? (ithús) (variant of ?????? (euthús, “straight”)) + ?????? (phallós, “penis; image of a penis, phallus”). The English word can be analysed as ithyphallus +? -ic.
As regards the noun, compare Latin ithyphallicum (“poem with the same metre as the hymns to Priapus”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?????fæl?k/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?????fæl?k/, /-??-/
- Rhymes: -æl?k
- Hyphenation: ithy?phall?ic
Adjective
ithyphallic (comparative more ithyphallic, superlative most ithyphallic)
- (historical, Ancient Rome) Of or pertaining to the erect phallus that was carried in bacchic processions.
- (specifically) Of a poem or song: having the metre of an ode sung in honour of the bacchic phallus.
- (specifically) Of a poem or song: having the metre of an ode sung in honour of the bacchic phallus.
- Of or pertaining to an upward pointing, erect penis; (specifically) of an artistic depiction of a deity or other figure: possessing an erect penis.
- Synonym: (one sense) priapic
- (by extension) Lascivious, obscene.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:obscene
- (poetry) Pertaining to a metrical combination of two trochees followed by one spondee.
Related terms
- ithyphallophobia
- ithyphallus
Translations
Noun
ithyphallic (plural ithyphallics)
- A poem or song in an ithyphallic metre.
- A lascivious or obscene poem or song.
Translations
Notes
References
Further reading
- phallus on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
ithyphallic From the web:
- what does ithyphallic meaning
- ithyphallic meaning
- what does ithyphallic
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