Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to the discussion of this word!
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word choreplay.
Examples
-
The concept of "choreplay" - that women are more likely to want to have sex when their male partner helps out around the house - is a hot topic in research circles.
FOXNews.com 2010
-
The concept of "choreplay" - that women are more likely to want to have sex when their male partner helps out around the house - is a hot topic in research circles.
-
For many women, this extra time provided through so-called "choreplay" equates to a romantic prologue.
Choreplay 2008
-
For many women, this extra time provided through so-called "choreplay" equates to a romantic prologue.
Archive 2008-02-01 2008
-
If only men realized the powerful influence of "choreplay," a term I picked up from urban dictionary. com.
Through The Illusion 2008
-
If only men realized the powerful influence of "choreplay," a term I picked up from urban dictionary. com.
Through The Illusion 2008
-
The clever men at DadLabs call this "choreplay," and I was thrilled to see a section on the benefits of choreplay in their new book, "
BlogHer 2009
-
Could somebody please inform my husband that I am NOT trying to be witty and original when I rave about choreplay?
-
According to experts, the best foreplay for women is 'choreplay,' or when a man does household chores without being asked like the dishes, laundry and vacuuming.
HindustanTimes.com - Top HomePage-TopStories News Headlines 2010
-
According to experts, the best foreplay for women is 'choreplay,' or when a man does household chores without being asked like the dishes, laundry and vacuuming.
HindustanTimes.com - Top HomePage-TopStories News Headlines 2010
scarequotes commented on the word choreplay
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/mar/06/sheryl-sandberg-lean-in-choreplay-sex-chores
Leaving the unfortunate coinage of “choreplay”, do we really want to live in a world where men are only cleaning up around the house to get some? In a New York Times op-ed touting the new campaign, Sheryl Sandberg and Adam Grant tell the story of a woman who asked her husband to do the laundry. They write, “He picked up the basket and asked hopefully, ‘Is this Lean In laundry?’” I understand that the anecdote is meant to be charming, but in a culture where men are already taught to feel entitled to women sexually, I don’t find it cute in the least.
March 9, 2015