sex-ridden
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]sex-ridden (comparative more sex-ridden, superlative most sex-ridden)
- Excessively concerned with or driven by sex.
- 1940, George Orwell, “Boys’ Weeklies”, in Inside the Whale[1], London: Victor Gollancz, page 96:
- When the Gem and Magnet were started it is probable that there was a deliberate intention to get away from the guilty sex-ridden atmosphere that pervaded so much of the earlier literature for boys.
- 1987 August 17, Ezra Bowen, “Are Student Heads Full of Emptiness?”, in Time[2], archived from the original on 25 August 2013:
- […] higher education has failed to keep the flame of true learning or guide today’s students, many of whom appear to Bloom to be sex-ridden moneygrubbers marching to the beat of rock music […]
- 2014 June 2, Alexandra Schwartz, “The Sympathetic Spy Downstairs”, in The New Yorker[3]:
- In Philip Roth’s “Zuckerman Unbound,” Zuckerman, rocketed to fame and fortune by a book that looks a lot like “Portnoy’s Complaint,” is set upon by anyone and everyone in New York—on the bus, in a coffee shop, in front of a funeral parlor. They come to ogle him, or to complain about his scandalous, sex-ridden novel, or to tell him what to do with his money.