Citations:bisexy

Adjective: "(slang) bisexual in an appealing manner; equally attractive to men and women"

 * 1989, Celeste West, A Lesbian Love Advisor, page 49:
 * In truth, bisexuals are just like the rest of us, some trustworthy, some not. Many Lesbians still want bisexual women to make an either/or "final" choice. But is not the fundamental gay affirmation that everyone should be free to love whomever they wish?
 * What we might enjoy and learn from the bisexy drama in the vast arena of sexuality is that on-stage genital games only suggest a genre. For the real action, watch the out-of-bed scenes for loyalty, authenticity and evolution.
 * 1995, Christian McLaughlin, "Girls, girls, girls", The Advocate, 21 March 1995, page 72:
 * A reworking of the Pygmalion story, "Aphrodite" strikes a tone similar to Anne Rice's Sleeping Beauty trilogy, minus the reams of diabolical bisexy kink that make those books so much fun
 * 1998, Outright!, January 1993, page 7:
 * SENSUAL, attractive, bisexy woman, 23, wants outgoing, uninhibited woman for erotic friendship.
 * 1998, Roberto Friedman, "Out There", Bay Area Reporter, 19 March 1998, page 38:
 * With a name like that [Shopping and Fucking], ex-San Franciscans Silvana Nova and Daniel Mangin — each of whom is an aficionado of one of these pastimes (you figure it out: Nova has a double-decker walk-in closet, and Mangin used to review porn for this paper) — just had to check out this gay/bisexy commentary on modern life.
 * 2000, Paul Golding, The Abomination, page 317:
 * From reception, I was ushered up by some young secretary, cropped and trousered and sexy, perhaps even bisexy—who could tell? I wouldn't have put Sappho past her,
 * 2001, Access Guide to Gay USA, page 325:
 * Lestat's Coffee House. Yep, the name's a nod to one of the bisexy bloodsuckers in Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire,
 * 2005, "O. C. Oh, puh-leeze", The Advocate, 15 March 2005, page 22:
 * So it would be, like, hella Julie Cooperish of us to suggest that the show is desperately trying to revive its shockingly slumpy sophomore season by sending boozy Marissa (Mischa Barton, right) into the bisexy arms of Alex (Olivia Wilde)?
 * 2014, Cliff James, Of Bodies Changed, unnumbered page:
 * 'Or Richard? He's a bisexy fucker, don't you think? He can't take his eyes off you.'