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  2. Rati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rati

    Rati stands for sexual pleasure, carnal desire and sexuality. [22] Rati represents only the pleasure aspect of sexual activity and does not relate to child-birth or motherhood. [ 23 ] Professor Catherine Benton of the Lake Forest College (Department of Religion) relates her birth from the "desire-ridden" sweat to bodily fluids produced during ...

  3. Lust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lust

    Lust is an intense desire for something. [1] [2] Lust can take any form such as the lust for sexuality (see libido), money, or power.It can take such mundane forms as the lust for food (see gluttony) as distinct from the need for food or lust for redolence, when one is lusting for a particular smell that brings back memories.

  4. Carnal knowledge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnal_knowledge

    Some translations translate the Hebrew expression more explicitly, undoing the euphemism for clarity to modern readers; for example, the New International Version translates the Hebrew phrase literally meaning "to know" as "to make love to" in Genesis 4:1, [2] and as "to have sex with" in Genesis 19. [3]

  5. Libido - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libido

    Sexual desire disorders are more common in women than in men, [64] and women tend to exhibit less frequent and less intense sexual desires than men. [65] Erectile dysfunction may happen to the penis because of lack of sexual desire, but these two should not be confused since the two can commonly occur simultaneously. [ 66 ]

  6. List of love and lust deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_love_and_lust_deities

    Himeros, god of sexual desire and unrequited love. Hedylogos, god of sweet talk and flattery. Heracles; Hermaphroditus, god of hermaphrodites and effeminate men. Hermes; Hymen, god of marriage, weddings, and the bridal hymn. Pothos, god of sexual longing, yearning, and desire. Hedone, goddess of pleasure.

  7. Tazkiyah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tazkiyah

    Tazkiyah (Arabic: تزكية) is an Arabic-Islamic term alluding to tazkiyat al-nafs, meaning 'sanctification' or 'purification of the self'. This refers to the process of transforming the nafs (carnal self or desires) from its state of self-centrality through various spiritual stages towards the level of purity and submission to the will of God. [1]

  8. Anna Karenina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Karenina

    Reviewing the translations by Bartlett and Schwartz for The New York Times Book Review, Masha Gessen noted that each new translation of Anna Karenina ended up highlighting an aspect of Tolstoy's "variable voice" in the novel, and thus, "The Tolstoy of Garnett... is a monocled British gentleman who is simply incapable of taking his characters as ...

  9. Legends of the coco de mer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legends_of_the_coco_de_mer

    externally the coco-de-mer represents the belly and thighs, the true seat of carnal desires [12] It occurred to at least some of Gordon's readers that if coco de mer was really the forbidden fruit, Eve would have had a very hard time handing this gigantic fruit (which weighs 15–30 kg) to Adam. [13]