Making sense of sensuous vs. sensual

Whenever I
Grammarsee the words sensuous and sensual in a client’s manuscript, my skin gets prickly all over. They often mix up the two words.



Sensuous means to appeal to the senses or to have strong sensory appeal, as in The Klingon found the Grapok sauce sensuous.



Sensual pertains to fleshly or sexual appeal, as in The Klingon warrior found B’etor’s ample bosom quite sensual.



The problem arises, I suspect, because sensuous sounds kind of sexy while sensual sounds comparatively a bit blah. But that’s just my personal reaction to the words.



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Published on December 11, 2013 04:46
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