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libidinal

American  
[li-bid-n-l] / lɪˈbɪd n l /

adjective

  1. Psychoanalysis. relating to the libido, all of the instinctual energies and desires derived from the id, an unconscious part of the psyche.

    This task of “behaving oneself” is always done through control of the libidinal excesses.

    A person preoccupied with excessive libidinal energy cannot shift focus from their own pressing needs to responsibilities involving other people.

  2. of or relating to the sexual instinct or drive.

    Individuals may marry for many reasons, including legal, social, libidinal, emotional, financial, and religious considerations.


Other Word Forms

  • libidinally adverb

Etymology

Origin of libidinal

First recorded in 1922; from Latin libīdin- (stem of libīdo libido ( def. ) ) + -al 1 ( def. )

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The historian Gordon Fraser calls it the "libidinal pleasures of paranoia" and traces the impulse from the "Illuminati Crisis" in 1798 to Pizzagate in 2016.

From Salon • Oct. 28, 2022

Young Goetzman once sold a water bed to famed hairdresser-turned-Hollywood producer Jon Peters, an anecdote Anderson spins into careening scenes of fiction featuring Bradley Cooper, who plays Peters as a libidinal, wild-eyed dervish.

From Washington Post • Dec. 22, 2021

Active citizenship, she suggests, operates in both fields at once — analytic and libidinal.

From New York Times • Apr. 9, 2021

On the whole, the narrator suffers from a breed of Holden Caulfield syndrome — fueled by the libidinal charge of anger and indignation — but his author lacks Salinger’s grace and control.

From New York Times • Sep. 21, 2018

And our attention will first be attracted by a consideration which promises to bring us in the most direct way to a proof that libidinal ties are what characterize a group.

From Group Psychology and The Analysis of The Ego by Freud, Sigmund