The holy book of all that is erotic. The contents of such a book will help any ordinary man or woman become a sex saint. It contains descriptive instructions and pictures of several different positions of intercourse, including positions involving standind, sitting, laying, handstands, bridges, kneeling, and many other forms a body can take. The goal of this holiest of books is for more variety and gratification in your sexual practices
WARNING: Some positions may cause soreness or injuries in places you never even knew you had. If problems persists please consult your physician or yoga instructor.
WARNING: Some positions may cause soreness or injuries in places you never even knew you had. If problems persists please consult your physician or yoga instructor.
Honey lets try position #235 in the "Kamasutra" again, but this time remember to balance at equilibrium between my legs while i do a headstand.
by JDawg April 3, 2003
A book written around 300 AD by Vatsyayana Mallanaga, and horribly translated into English and altered in Victorian times by a British army officer. Less than a quarter of the book is devoted to the sexual position graphics it is known for. The rest is advice that is either outdated or illegal by today's standards, such as seducing a virgin by giving her sculptures of goats with big erections and raping her if she won't put out.
by Richard Burton April 5, 2003
Kamasutram, generally known to the Western world as Kama Sutra, is an ancient Indian text on human sexual behavior, widely considered to be the standard work on love in Sanskrit literature. The text was composed by Vatsyayana, as a brief summary of various earlier works belonging to a tradition known generically as Kama Shastra, the science of love. Kama is literally desire. Sutra signifies a thread, or discourse threaded on a series of aphorisms. Sutra was a standard term for a technical text, thus also the Yogasutram of Patanjali. The text is originally known as Vatsyayana Kamasutram ("Vatsyayana's Aphorisms on Love"). Tradition holds that the author was a celibate scholar. He is believed to have lived sometime between the 1st to 6th centuries AD, probably during the great cultural flowering of the Gupta period.
by Andy N. July 11, 2006
Hindu religious text that shows sexual positions in some parts and gives other helpful tips such as smearing a man's penis in buffalo butter will keep him at attention for weeks among others...
by Not so super DJ Gennady April 9, 2003
A Hindu book devoted to sex. Hindus are open about sexual acts of all kinds and accepting of it and consider it truly sacred and pleasurable at the same time.
It was a book written way before anyone of these snooty British people mistranslated it and gave it different views. It is a sacred book of India. No wonder we had such healthy sex lives....unlike those uptight judeo-christian-muslim people.
Unfortunately, this book has been portrayed by the dman britons in two ways: as a SEX book, or as something else so farfetched, it's dumb. Damn, u guys eyes have been opened up by this book. Sex is a sacred act that is pleasurable and needed at the same time. Hindus are open about it and have been for ten's of thousands of yrs.
this scripture should not be mocked.
It was a book written way before anyone of these snooty British people mistranslated it and gave it different views. It is a sacred book of India. No wonder we had such healthy sex lives....unlike those uptight judeo-christian-muslim people.
Unfortunately, this book has been portrayed by the dman britons in two ways: as a SEX book, or as something else so farfetched, it's dumb. Damn, u guys eyes have been opened up by this book. Sex is a sacred act that is pleasurable and needed at the same time. Hindus are open about it and have been for ten's of thousands of yrs.
this scripture should not be mocked.
by desi_ma April 13, 2003
by marna is large April 4, 2003