orgasmic

adj
/oɹˈɡæz.mɪk/US

Etymology

From Ancient Greek. The historically "correct" form is orgastic. Nouns from Ancient Greek that end in -sm regularly form adjectives ending in -stic: for example, enthusiasm / enthusiastic, sarcasm / sarcastic. By way of counterexample, the ahistorical -mic also appears in the terms protoplasmic and cataclysmic (instead of *protoplastic and *cataclystic).

Definitions

  1. Of or relating to orgasms.

  2. Prone to or capable of having orgasms.

    • Seemingly every year, another study announces that married women are more orgasmic than single women.
    • They've helped non-orgasmic women become orgasmic, they've helped orgasmic women become more orgasmic, and they've helped many women experience their first multiple orgasms (we'll talk about that later!).
    • The gentler the sensation or touch the more orgasmic I am.
  3. Very exciting or stimulating.

    • It must be an orgasmic experience to be an astronaut and see the Earth as a little, colourful marble surrounded by blackness.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for orgasmic. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA