Advertisement
Advertisement
ravishing
[ rav-i-shing ]
ravishing
/ 藞谤忙惫瑟蕛瑟艐 /
adjective
- delightful; lovely; entrancing
Derived Forms
- 藞谤补惫颈蝉丑颈苍驳濒测, adverb
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 谤补惫顎僫蝉丑路颈苍驳路濒测 adverb
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of ravishing1
Advertisement
About This 亚洲网紅露点
What else does ravishing mean?
Content warning: this article contains sexual language.
Someone, usually a woman, called ravishing is 鈥渟tunningly beautiful.鈥
To听ravish someone historically meant to 鈥減lunder鈥 or 鈥渧iolently seize and rape a woman,鈥 but in contemporary speech it refers to wanting passionate, consensual intercourse with a person.
Where does ravishing come from?
Ravishing begins with the Latin rapere, 鈥渢o seize or carry off by force.鈥 Via French, this verb ultimately formed such English words as ravenous, rape, rapid, ravage, and ravish.
Ravish is recorded in the early 1300s. While it could more generally mean 鈥渞ob鈥 or 鈥plunder,鈥 ravish was specifically used of violently 鈥渄ragging a woman away,鈥 often involving rape.
The 鈥渞ape鈥 and 鈥減lunder鈥 ravish now sounds more obsolete, and the sense of the verb has softened. If you say you want to ravish someone today, it usually means you really want to have passionate, consensual sex with them.
Ravish also survives in ravishing, as in you look ravishing. This sense is found in the 1400s, originally of something that produced a strong emotion in a person (i.e., something that has really seized them). That鈥檚 how ravishing gets used for something 鈥enchanting鈥 or 鈥渂eautiful.鈥
How is ravishing used in real life?
In contemporary English, ravishing is primarily used to compliment women as captivating in their looks and, sometimes, personality. One may especially hear the word, say, during the Academy Awards as women take to the red carpet looking ravishing in their gowns. Ravishing may also be used of works of art, like music or paintings.
Win or lose Lana will always be 馃挋馃檶
鈥 Adrieyuanna (@adriejones)
Contrary to its rape-related origins, to be ravished in contemporary English can be something people like.
More examples of ravishing:
鈥淪tunning! Teri Hatcher was ravishing in a red dress on Friday Afternoon. The 53-year-old brunette beauty was on a panel to discuss her TV show Lois & Clark at the Comic-Con panel in New York City.鈥
鈥擧eidi Parker, Daily Mail (caption), October 2018
Note
This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the term鈥檚 history, meaning, and usage.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse