anegosexual

English

Etymology

From an- +‎ ego- +‎ -sexual.

Adjective

anegosexual (comparative more anegosexual, superlative most anegosexual)

  1. Alternative form of aegosexual.
    • 2019 May, Rebekah Dawson, “Table 1: Participant Identities”, in Transgender and Gender-Nonconforming Experiences with Expanding Identity Language: An Exploration into the Use and Function of Identity Language in the LGBT+ Community[1], Murfreesboro, Tenn.: Middle Tennessee State University, Appendix B, page 70:
      Sapph [] [Sexuality] Pansexual; Autochorissexual/Anegosexual Autochrorisromantic[sic]/Anegoromantic
    • 2019 November 4, Jude Tresswell, chapter 2, in Body Parts and Mind Games (County Durham Quad; 4), →ISBN:
      [] He’s ace. He doesn’t experience sexual attraction. That’s what being ace is, isn’t it?” / “Well, as I’ve told you before, I think it’s a little more complicated than that. There are shades of grey.” / “Not when you’ve tetra-thingy vision there aren’t. What you see as grey, I see as loads of yellows and pale blues.” / “I meant that there are various permutations.” / “Don’t I know it!” said Raith, dismissively. “Demisexual. Freysexual. Greysexual. Anegosexual—what the fuck is that? I’ve seen it all on Tumblr and Reddit.”
    • 2021 July 6, Nicolette K. R. Zangari, Selecting a Sexual Orientation Label: How Individuals Decide What Label to Use[2], Lawrence, Kan.: University of Kansas, pages 96 and 111:
      (ID497, cis woman, anegosexual, age 32). [] In some cases, participants preferred to use labels that were “technically correct,” such as the participant who identified as “anegosexual” to describe their sexuality centered around a preference for fictional sex.
    • [2023 February 19, Sohini Chakraborty, “The Spectrum of Asexuality a Deep Dive into the Community, Its History, and the Legal Barriers”, in Rishikesh Dave, editor, Jus Corpus Law Journal, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh: Ayush Pandey, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 155:
      Aegosexual (also known as anegosexual, historically referred to as autochorissexual) is a micro-label within the asexual spectrum that pertains to individuals experiencing a detachment from the object of arousal.]
    • [2023 October 15, Feral Sephrian [pseudonym], chapter 1, in Butterfly’s Kiss, JMS Books LLC, →ISBN:
      Dr. Ramos had done some research and found a relatively recently coined term, anegosexual, which essentially meant he was unable to feel sexual arousal when imagining himself as part of the encounter.]