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  2. Dominance and submission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominance_and_submission

    In D/s, both parties take pleasure or erotic enjoyment from either dominating or being dominated. Those who take the superior position are called dominants—Doms (regardless of gender) or Dommes (female)—while those who take the subordinate position are called submissive, or subs. A switch is an individual who plays either role. Two switches ...

  3. Erotic humiliation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erotic_humiliation

    As the Internet has grown and continues to grow, so does online humiliation. Anecdotal reports indicate that the proportion of men being dominated by women on the Internet, through some type of personal service provided for a fee by the woman, vastly exceeds the instances of a woman being dominated online by a man, or another woman.

  4. Glossary of BDSM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_BDSM

    Financial domination: (Also known as money slavery or findom) is a sexual fetish associated with a practice of dominance and submission, where a submissive (money slave, finsub, paypig, human ATM, or cash piggy) will give gifts and money to a financial dominant (money Mistress/Master, findomme/findom, money Dom/Domme or cash Master/Mistress).

  5. Expressions of dominance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expressions_of_dominance

    Furthermore, body control, posture, lean, and openness all were found to relate to dominance. For instance, Dunbar and Burgoon (2005) found that the more body control a woman had the more observers perceived her as dominant (.27) and that in general the most powerful are also the most facially expressive and the least controlled in their body.

  6. BDSM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BDSM

    Wismeijer and van Assen (2013) found that "the association of BDSM role and gender was strong and significant" with only 8% of women in the study being dominant compared to 75% being submissive.; [136] Hébert and Weaver (2014) found that 9% of women in their study were dominant compared to 88% submissive; [137] Weierstall1 and Giebel (2017 ...

  7. Dominance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominance

    Dominatrix, a woman who takes the dominant role in BDSM activities; Strategic dominance, in game theory, when one strategy is better for one opponent regardless of the other opponent's strategy; Dominance (linguistics), a relationship between syntactic nodes; Dominance (geography), a radius used with topographic isolation

  8. Discipline (BDSM) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discipline_(BDSM)

    In BDSM, rules can be made so that a submissive ("sub") knows how they should behave in order not to displease the dominant. Rules are usually set and agreed upon by the dominant and the submissive before the beginning of any BDSM scene and/or situation, and can also be used to help make the sub feel inferior, or for "training" a novice sub, though such is not always the case and rules can be ...

  9. Female submission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Female_submission

    Female submission is common in traditional literature. [7] Story of O, published in 1954 in French, is an erotic tale of female submission involving a beautiful Parisian fashion photographer named O, who is taught to be constantly available for all forms of sex, offering herself to any male.