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单词 sexology
释义

Definition of sexology in English:

sexology

noun sɛkˈsɒlədʒisɛkˈsɑlədʒi
mass noun
  • The study of human sexual life or relationships.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Moreover, many of the categories used in sexology to describe sexual life have been shown not to be universal but highly localized.
    • In fact, they are taken from recent sex research, so that I don't convey the message that all the advances are occurring outside sexology.
    • Reform-era sexology appropriated the degenerative/regenerative discourse of the natural selection model as a way to establish a new lexicon that would address sexuality more specifically.
    • Failure to publish has already become a problem in sexology, insofar as early studies of the impact of Viagra on women, completed in early 1997, have not yet been published as of the date of this manuscript.
    • In sum, the value of the volume stems not only from its utility as a resource for cross-cultural information about sexuality but also from its role in the cultural history of sexology.
    • There are, however, a number of good sexuality-specific Web sites that can provide effective starting points for targeted searches in sexology, of which several are spotlighted below.
    • The book is only marginally about sex, and takes a dour view of sexology, survey research, and Western-influenced sex education.
    • Is sexology on its way to becoming a subsidiary of the pharmaceutical industry?
    • Currently there is less funding but great interest in furthering the study of sexology from a perspective that pays primary attention to the social, cultural, and historical contextualization of sexual behaviors and responses.
    • If sexology loses its independent status, the public will have even fewer places to turn for sexual enlightenment free from commercial or political bias.
    • In the 1920s, sexology did not constitute a stabilized system.
    • The resulting discussions introduce a way of thinking about sexual experience that bypasses some of sexology's most sacred cows, such as survey data and the debates about gender, orientation, morality, and medical intervention.
    • Except she's on her way, not to a sales convention, but a sexology conference in Paris.
    • Professionals in the newly minted disciplines of the human psyche - sexology, psychology, and psychiatry - increasingly conceived of personality, gender, and sexuality as products of culture and upbringing.

Derivatives

  • sexological

  • adjective sɛksəˈlɒdʒɪk(ə)l
    • Secondary or tertiary knowledge of sexological theory was sufficiently established in 1920s London for it to be represented in popular culture.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the sexological literature, sexual desire problems, of all sexual dysfunctions, are considered the hardest to treat and the most resistant to change.
      • Most sexological journals are not available online to the public at large, although some are available to faculty and students at particular institutions whose library subscribes to this service.
      • It covers an incredibly diverse range of issues, from historical, anthropological, sociological, psychological, sexological, physiological, and other perspectives.
      • Rather than an alphabetical sequence of topics, for each country the contents are organized into chapters that address 13 basic issues, ranging from basic sexological perspectives to sexual dysfunctions.
  • sexologist

  • noun sɛkˈsɒlədʒɪstsɛkˈsɑlədʒəst
    • His career as a sexologist (now the subject of a film, which opens next month) began in 1938, when he was in his 40s and had accomplished about all he could with his gall wasps and was looking for some other outlet for his uncontainable energy.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Against the sentimental, self-indulgent, and socially destructive rhetoric of romance, marriage experts and sexologists such as Ellis deployed the scientific language of personal interaction, conflict management, and healing.
      • Research by the famous sexologists Masters and Johnson, published in 1966 as Human Sexual Response, did much to re-appropriate the pursuit of sexual pleasure as a ‘healthy’ activity.
      • The Montreal psychologist and sexologist writes 100 reports a year for courts analyzing the psychological tendencies of the accused and appears another three or four times testifying as an expert witness in high-profile cases.
      • Moreover, sexologists, degenerationists, and biomedical researchers alike did not widely agree on the terms of sexual identity and practice, nor did they always highlight sexuality as a primary category of identification.
 
 

Definition of sexology in US English:

sexology

nounsekˈsäləjēsɛkˈsɑlədʒi
  • The study of human sexual life or relationships.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In fact, they are taken from recent sex research, so that I don't convey the message that all the advances are occurring outside sexology.
    • Currently there is less funding but great interest in furthering the study of sexology from a perspective that pays primary attention to the social, cultural, and historical contextualization of sexual behaviors and responses.
    • Except she's on her way, not to a sales convention, but a sexology conference in Paris.
    • Reform-era sexology appropriated the degenerative/regenerative discourse of the natural selection model as a way to establish a new lexicon that would address sexuality more specifically.
    • The book is only marginally about sex, and takes a dour view of sexology, survey research, and Western-influenced sex education.
    • In the 1920s, sexology did not constitute a stabilized system.
    • In sum, the value of the volume stems not only from its utility as a resource for cross-cultural information about sexuality but also from its role in the cultural history of sexology.
    • Failure to publish has already become a problem in sexology, insofar as early studies of the impact of Viagra on women, completed in early 1997, have not yet been published as of the date of this manuscript.
    • Is sexology on its way to becoming a subsidiary of the pharmaceutical industry?
    • Professionals in the newly minted disciplines of the human psyche - sexology, psychology, and psychiatry - increasingly conceived of personality, gender, and sexuality as products of culture and upbringing.
    • Moreover, many of the categories used in sexology to describe sexual life have been shown not to be universal but highly localized.
    • There are, however, a number of good sexuality-specific Web sites that can provide effective starting points for targeted searches in sexology, of which several are spotlighted below.
    • If sexology loses its independent status, the public will have even fewer places to turn for sexual enlightenment free from commercial or political bias.
    • The resulting discussions introduce a way of thinking about sexual experience that bypasses some of sexology's most sacred cows, such as survey data and the debates about gender, orientation, morality, and medical intervention.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 5:34:05