Pronunciation:
/ˈɛn.tɚ.kɔrs.ɪd.nɪs/
(EN-
ter-cors-
ed-
ness)
Definition:
1. The state of being deeply and often permanently tangled or changed through intimate, emotional, or psychological exchange.
2. A kind of altered or surreal condition where people, thoughts, or experiences blend and overlap so much that the boundaries between them become unclear.
3. A poetic way to describe being marked or changed by connection, a lasting impression that stays with you after the encounter.
Etymology:
The word comes from “intercourse,” in its older meaning of communication or interaction between beings. Adding “-
ed” suggests that the action has already happened and left a mark, while “-
ness” turns it into a state of being. Together, the word describes what it feels like to carry the lasting effect of deep connection, whether mental, emotional, spiritual, or existential.
Why it's important:
While
words like “connection” or “intimacy” describe moments or feelings, intercoursedness points to
something more lasting and deeper—a fusion that leaves a permanent trace and changes who you are. It fills a
gap between just meeting or knowing someone and being truly and irreversibly altered by that experience.
“Their connection wasn’t just conversation- it was intercoursedness. Like they had entered each other’s minds and
never fully left.”
“The song left something behind that I couldn’t shake. That’s the kind of intercoursedness I look for in
art.”
“After everything we’ve been through, even silence feels full of intercoursedness.”
“Even a
short meeting gave Orson intercoursedness, a lasting impression he couldn’t shake.”