The magazine is looking for couples to talk about the turn-on that always works for them. |
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You never know, she might find your new-found sense of responsibility a turn-on, which would come in very handy on those long winter nights. |
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I'm not sure why this was such a turn-on, but there you have it he is American. |
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While success is something of a genuine turn-on, it's much less so to women who meet lots of successful men, and have come to expect it. |
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It was such a turn-on to see someone that open, and I felt so honoured that she let me share it with her. |
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I have to admit that his being married, even as tenuously as Jason was, was kind of a turn-on. |
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Tell her exactly what you'd like to do and why it's a turn-on. |
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I've always had a dark side, and for me that's kind of a sexual turn-on. |
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Ronnie always says he fancies me and that's a great turn-on for a woman. |
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I find the following in an interview with a fave celebrity crush to be a turn-on. |
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His biggest turn-on is a girl in a bikini, so I had better get to the gym post-haste. |
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Users can expand and turn-on group headings to see further groups or layers. |
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When a MOS channel is formed by forward biasing the gate, a Zener tunnel current evolves with a steep turn-on characteristic. |
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For many enthusiasts, in fact, the tools can become more of a turn-on than the trade. |
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For the non-poppers, the turn-on is watching the balloon expand and expand. |
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Something I would find terrifying a man might find a turn-on. |
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The difference in turn-on time would generally not be noticeable for standard household incandescent bulbs, since they turn on very quickly. |
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To all the straight men reading, your level of emotional intelligence, respect towards women, and nerdy sense of humour is a major turn-on for a geeky sapiophile girl like myself. |
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One man's turn-on is another's squick. But, if she chickened out now, the whole plan would fall apart. |
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Nothing is a greater turn-on for Mom than seeing her funsome leading man enjoying her offspring. |
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The study conducted by University of Sussex found that syncopated off-beat rhythms, typical of jazz, proved more of a turn-on than simple chords and melodies for women. |
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