jacqueline
10-07-2007, 07:42 PM
News--for finding desire and bedroom education of Italians is shared by the feminine monthly Cosmopolitan. They interviewed 500 males between the ages of 18 and 35 years old. To the fateful question "What turns you off most in bed?" 43% of the sample answered "vulgar language," followed by "aggressiveness." For some, a woman exhibiting a coarse tongue and decisive lovemaking witnesses a decided dearth of her actions in descriptions of the ideal partner.
Potential "body odour or perspiration" of the partner is judged uninfluential and leaves disconcerted only 1.7% of young men and 5% of the more mature men. For some, it's just as well that the male erotic universe, like all things, suffers its ebbs and flows. Drive off the "tigress" and welcome the turtle dove, but here things are split. Either the percentage of women who do not take care of personal hygiene is quite low, or men prefer to put clothespins on their noses rather than fingers in their ears. But who knows, perhaps he prefers to leave his hands free for other activities. Or at least one hopes so.
At the top of the list---her behaviours that displease him; a woman who yields on a first date would cause a loss of interest in 40% of the cases for men in their thirties and in 33% for those in their twenties. Therefore, the beginning is given to games. This returns us to the grand rituals of courtship and the lost art of flirtation.
Finally, the Italian man finds it unbearable if she lights a cigarette after making love, or worse reaches for the remote control. A little because the legion of nonsmokers (willing or not) is on the rise, but above all because the act leads him to the suspicion that she is not satisfied with his performance, or of "frigidity" affecting their meetings. And therefore, he is the Italian male of the new millennium wanting to be reassured and even cuddled after sex.
From Italian bedrooms it has been announced that "dirty talking" is language "too coarse" for pillow talk.
Potential "body odour or perspiration" of the partner is judged uninfluential and leaves disconcerted only 1.7% of young men and 5% of the more mature men. For some, it's just as well that the male erotic universe, like all things, suffers its ebbs and flows. Drive off the "tigress" and welcome the turtle dove, but here things are split. Either the percentage of women who do not take care of personal hygiene is quite low, or men prefer to put clothespins on their noses rather than fingers in their ears. But who knows, perhaps he prefers to leave his hands free for other activities. Or at least one hopes so.
At the top of the list---her behaviours that displease him; a woman who yields on a first date would cause a loss of interest in 40% of the cases for men in their thirties and in 33% for those in their twenties. Therefore, the beginning is given to games. This returns us to the grand rituals of courtship and the lost art of flirtation.
Finally, the Italian man finds it unbearable if she lights a cigarette after making love, or worse reaches for the remote control. A little because the legion of nonsmokers (willing or not) is on the rise, but above all because the act leads him to the suspicion that she is not satisfied with his performance, or of "frigidity" affecting their meetings. And therefore, he is the Italian male of the new millennium wanting to be reassured and even cuddled after sex.
From Italian bedrooms it has been announced that "dirty talking" is language "too coarse" for pillow talk.