intimacy

(noun)

Feeling or atmosphere of closeness and openness towards someone else, not necessarily involving sexuality.

Related Terms

  • courtship
  • courtly love

Examples of intimacy in the following topics:

  • Effects of Group Size on Stability and Intimacy

    • As people have more and more online friends, how does this effect group stability and intimacy?
  • Romantic Love

    • During the initial stages of a romantic relationship, there is more often more emphasis on emotions—especially those of love, intimacy, compassion, appreciation, and affinity—rather than physical intimacy.
    • Within an established relationship, romantic love can be defined as a freeing or optimizing of intimacy in a particularly luxurious manner, or perhaps in greater spirituality, irony, or peril to the relationship.
  • Eye Contact

    • Eye contact can establish a sense of intimacy between two individuals, such as the gazes of lovers or the eye contact involved in flirting.
  • Social Interaction in Urban Areas

    • Contact with the hypothetical person that Georg Simmel calls "the stranger" changes the way urban dwellers think about intimacy, personal space, and casual interactions.
    • Contact with the hypothetical person that Georg Simmel calls "the stranger" changes the way urban dwellers think about intimacy, personal space, and casual interactions.
  • Dimensions of Human Development

    • It may be hard to establish intimacy if one has not developed trust or a sense of identity.
  • Applied Body Language

    • Flirting usually involves speaking and behaving in a way that suggests a mildly greater level of intimacy than the actual relationship between parties would justify, though within the rules of social etiquette, which generally frown upon a direct expression of sexual interest.
  • Gender Differences in Social Interaction

    • Likewise, feminine people tend to communicate more affection, and with greater intimacy and confidence than masculine people.
  • Biological Differences

    • Finally, females have slightly more olfactory receptors on average and are more easily re-aroused immediately after orgasm (potentially due to traditional associations of femininities to the pursuit of sexual pleasure and intimacy in relation to masculine associations with sexual conquest and performance).
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