erotic
/ɪˈrɒtɪk/ (bre, ipa) · /ɪˈrɑːtɪk/ (ame, ipa) · /i-ˈrä-tik/ (ame, mw)
erotic — adjective
1. connected with the experience or expression of strong feelings of physical or ro
connected with the experience or expression of strong feelings of physical or romantic love, especially when the focus is on the pleasure and beauty of sexual intimacy — for example, in a painting, a film, a photograph, or a piece of writing that aims to arouse those feelings in a tasteful way.
The museum held a special exhibition of erotic art from ancient Japan.
collocation: erotic art
Roya described the novel's love scenes as erotic rather than crude.
be + erotic (predicative use)
Élise was known for her tasteful erotic portraits that focused on shadow and light.
Liam felt uncomfortable watching the erotic scenes with his parents in the room.
- sexual
much broader; covers any subject connected with sex, not just feelings of pleasure in art or media
- sexy
informal, used for people, clothes, or looks; 'erotic' is more formal and often describes content rather than a person
- sensual
focuses on physical pleasure of the senses (touch, taste, smell) without necessarily being about sex
- arousing
more direct about the effect on the viewer/reader; less attached to artistic quality
文法句型
erotic + noun
be + erotic
用法筆記
Frequently used in contexts of art, literature, cinema, and photography where the intention is to show or suggest sexual feeling with a sense of beauty or emotional depth. Less common in everyday conversation about sexual attraction — speakers more often use 'sexy' for people or 'sexually explicit' for media. Distinguish from 'pornographic', which describes content created solely to cause sexual excitement, often with graphic detail and no artistic intent.