Associations to the word «Kinsey»
Noun
- Howard
- Planner
- Suspect
- Male
- Fraud
- Martin
- Donald
- Scott
- Brett
- Methodology
- Lennon
- Grandmother
- Miranda
- Colleague
- Wilson
- Geoff
- Shirley
- Clara
- Irene
- Richards
- Livingston
- Research
- Steve
- Johnson
- Charlotte
- Laura
- Pill
- Betty
- Brian
- Evelyn
- Reich
- Mad
- Tate
- Antarctica
- Lester
- Dante
- Philanthropist
- Grid
- Bernard
- Agnes
- Biology
- Novel
- Photographer
- Hi
- Preference
- Psychology
- Montana
- Blues
- Beverly
- Nina
- Leslie
- Disappearance
- Vegas
- Rape
- Kate
- Bobby
- Tyler
- Behaviour
- Hire
- Cop
- Keyboard
- Diary
- Interview
- Claire
- Finding
- Jazz
- Wells
- Survey
- Photograph
- Glacier
- Gary
- Heath
- Henderson
- Anthropology
- Is
- Aunt
- Randy
Adjective
Wiktionary
KINSEY, proper noun. A surname.
KINSEY 0, noun. A person who is exclusively heterosexual.
KINSEY 0S, noun. Plural of Kinsey 0
KINSEY 1, noun. A person who is predominantly heterosexual, only incidentally homosexual.
KINSEY 1S, noun. Plural of Kinsey 1
KINSEY 2, noun. A person who is predominantly heterosexual, but more than incidentally homosexual.
KINSEY 2S, noun. Plural of Kinsey 2
KINSEY 3, noun. A bisexual person who is equally attracted to men and women.
KINSEY 3S, noun. Plural of Kinsey 3
KINSEY 4, noun. A person who is predominantly homosexual, but more than incidentally heterosexual.
KINSEY 4S, noun. Plural of Kinsey 4
KINSEY 5, noun. A person who is predominantly homosexual, only incidentally heterosexual.
KINSEY 5S, noun. Plural of Kinsey 5
KINSEY 6, noun. A person who is exclusively homosexual.
KINSEY 6S, noun. Plural of Kinsey 6
KINSEY SCALE, noun. A scale devised by Alfred Kinsey, used to measure a person's sexuality, ranging from 0 (exclusively heterosexual) to 6 (exclusively homosexual), passing through different stages of bisexuality, including the 3 in the middle (bisexual, attracted to men and women equally).
Dictionary definition
KINSEY, noun. United States zoologist best known for his interview studies of sexual behavior (1894-1956).
Wise words
One merit of poetry few persons will deny: it says more and
in fewer words than prose.