English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From sex +‎ -dom.

Noun edit

sexdom (uncountable)

  1. The sphere or world of sex; sexuality
    • 1970, Wilfrido D. Nolledo, But for the Lovers:
      [] the Grand Potioner, the Exalted Pied Piper of Passion parted the Red Sterility and revolutionized all sexdom.
    • 1987, Universitas, volume 9:
      [] who suffers the painful pang of remorse for a badly utilised youth, Okot p'Bitek in 'Song of Malaya portrays the image of the tigress as die hard prostitutes who speak for themselves, about themselves and who luxuriate in their sexdom.
    • 2006, Dotman, Ground Zero:
      Only the geniuses then had all the women. This was the flora of sex civilization, or sexdom. Sexdom was so strong, a stigma that lasted over time, which supports the long-running dispute about whether humans evolved from a single species.
    • 2010, Izabella St. James, Bunny Tales: Behind Closed Doors at the Playboy Mansion:
      I remember being curious to see if Hef was a good lover; age aside, I wanted to see if this experienced King of Sexdom knew anything the rest of us did not.
    • 2012, Parul A. Mittal, Arranged Love:
      'I will tell Deep about my feelings once he has dispersed his pearls of sexdom to this horizontally challenged guy,' I thought to myself. 'It's important to build your stamina because it's not a spectator sport,' I heard Deep say after some time.
    • 2014, Robert Vaughan, The New Frontier:
      Marcella was forty-one, and though Hollywood was now full of young beauties such as Raquel Welch and Jane Fonda, the “Elder Stateswomen of Sexdom,” as one wag had called Marcella Mills and Marilyn Monroe, were still able to turn more than a few heads.