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Intimacy Boner 

v.

An erection that comes to fruition when a partner shares those special three words.
Her: I love you.
Him: *gets a raging hard on*
Her: Did you just get hard?
Him: It's an Intimacy Boner. Look it up.
Intimacy Boner by Bae Poo 69 September 3, 2021

antimacassar 

An antimacasser is a small mat--usually crocheted or tatted but maybe embroidered on silk, linen, cotton or wool of woven cloth--which was used in Victorian and Edwardian times to protect the top back and sometimes arms of upholstered chairs and sofas from men's hair oil. Macassar oil was a common hair oil made from palm or coconut oil and usually scented with Ylang-ylang. The name is taken from the port of Makassar in Indonesia from which the product was imported.
The old lady's room was crowed with heavy mahogany furniture, deeply carved, upholstered with dusty, crimson plush with intricate crochet antimacassar mats draping the backs of the chairs, still emitting the faint, stale sent of the hair oil of by-gone generations of gentlemen.
antimacassar by bbarbib May 26, 2009

intimacy 

Closeness in attraction and appeal of thought, emotion, or physical language of love in a relationship
Intimacy between a man and a woman who share a bond of attraction and feelings of love. Intimacy is the heartful or mindful seat of emotional, physical, and mental properties that are earnest and close to your heart acting towards another person for the sake of a relationship or expressing feelings of concern, respect, and ambiguity (the quality of being open to more than one interpretation). To listen to the rigorous ( extremely thorough, exhaustive, accurate) in them and excercise their spirituality with your spirituality in an optomistic, unbiased, caring way.
intimacy by sunflowermadness January 18, 2019

virtual intimacy 

We I read what you wrote it's like kissing the nape of your neck, wrapping our fingers together, seeing you though we are apart, in splendid virtual intimacy.

antimacassar 

An antimacassar is a small cloth placed over the backs or arms of chairs, or sofas. Historically, the Edwardian male penchant for oiling one's coiffure continued into Victorian times; necessitating the invention of washable decorative fabric blotters. They are still used in luxury rail lines and immaculate Japanese taxis.

The name is derived from the Indian unguent for the hair commonly used in the early 19th century, macassar oil— the poet Byron called it, "thine incomparable oil, Macassar."
They first came to have elaborate patterns, often in matching sets for the various items of parlour furniture; they were either made at home using a variety of techniques such as crochet or tatting, or purchased from drapers.

The original antimacassar was often made of white crochet-work, stiffened and uncomfortable, but in the third quarter of the 19th century it became simpler and was made of soft coloured stuffs, usually worked with a simple pattern in tinted wools or silk.

antimacassar by sherbearcie March 4, 2007

antimacassar 

doily, especially as used to prevent men's brilliantine (macassar) from staining upholstered furniture
There were crocheted antimacassars on the headrests of the train seats
antimacassar by Paljoey September 28, 2003