orgasmic

Etymology
From. The historically "correct" form is. Nouns from Ancient Greek that end in -sm regularly form adjectives ending in -stic: for example, /,  /. By way of counterexample, the ahistorical -mic also appears in the terms and  (instead of *protoplastic and *cataclystic).

Adjective

 * 1)  Of or relating to orgasms.
 * 2)  Prone to or capable of having orgasms.
 * 3) * 2010, Anonymised diarist, in Bettina Arndt, What Men Want in Bed, 2012, page 266:
 * The gentler the sensation or touch the more orgasmic I am.
 * 1) Very exciting or stimulating.
 * It must be an orgasmic experience to be an astronaut and see the Earth as a little, colourful marble surrounded by blackness.
 * 1) Very exciting or stimulating.
 * It must be an orgasmic experience to be an astronaut and see the Earth as a little, colourful marble surrounded by blackness.

Translations

 * Albanian: orgazmik
 * Catalan:
 * Danish: orgastisk
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: orgasma
 * Finnish: orgastinen
 * French:, ,
 * Galician:
 * German: orgasmisch, orgastisch
 * Greek:
 * Hungarian:
 * Italian: orgasmico
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: orgastisk
 * Nynorsk: orgastisk
 * Portuguese: orgástico, orgásmico
 * Romanian: orgasmic, orgastic
 * Russian:, , оргазми́ческий
 * Slovene: orgazmičen
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: orgasmisk, orgastisk
 * Volapük: sömitamapünik
 * Yiddish: אָרגאַסמיק

Etymology
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