: Generally attractive, fashionable, stimulating, or interesting (e.g., "a sexy new marketing campaign" or "a sexy piece of technology" ).
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: A highly exaggerated, misspelled variation of the slang word "sexy." The repetition of the letters "x" and "y" is common in informal text messaging and spam internet domains to emphasize physical attractiveness. they represent a hyper-textual anxiety
A corruption. A digital evolution. Derived from the Old English sēx (archaic, rarely used in this form) and the plural noun ladies (referring to women of rank or polite address). The excessive letters—x’s and y’s—are not typos. In the early 21st-century lexicon, they represent a hyper-textual anxiety, a desire to bypass semantic meaning and access pure, algorithmic attention.
Most free translation tools (like Google Translate or DeepL) translate "sexy" directly into equivalent terms such as atractivo/a (Spanish), séduisant/e (French), or sexuell attraktiv (German). Because the word is so globally recognized, many languages use the English loanword "sexy" directly. The Cultural Nuance: "Sexy" vs. "Ladies"
You can find the full definition on the Oxford Learner's Dictionary .