I call a real-life obtainable everyday cute or attractive if I want him.Īt the end of the day though - it's not a guy's looks I put emphasis on. Sounds like we have a bunch of butt hurt macho dudes here.Īlso, cute means moderately physically attractive to me - which guess what is most people at best. I recently called a guy I went out with "cute" and I meant it in a "you are attractive" way as in I wanted him to screw me silly while explaining the mechanics of intercourse to me in a low, broken voice. Why does everyone hyper analyze a compliment to death? If you get a compliment accept it instead of being an asshole about it. Sorry ladies this is true and this is coming from a very attractive or "cute" you man. Guys can't be everything eitherwise if they were we should all be dating victoria secret models and brush you average girls aside who have this high impression about themselves. But I also thought looks is not the only thing that makes you ladies attracted to men? But it is the only thing apparently. You don't need to call us "sexy" or "hot" cause then we think you're a fake and 99% of the times girls are, cause they are big fat good liars that put on a brave smiling face in the beginning. How do they know if you are attracted to them by calling them cute? They need definite words like "handsome", "good looking" "attractive" then they will feel good about themselves and be better towards you the ladies. Guys don't understand the meaning of cute when you tell them this, especially when first meeting or dating in the beginning. You girls are so confusing and conflicting. Note: Ryan Gosling is one of those rare cases where he is both cute and hot because of this: Celebrity examples: ‘Cute’- Ashton Kutcher, Justin Timberlake, Jake Gyllenhaal, Ryan Gosling, Abercrombie models ‘Hot’: Adam Levine, Ryan Gosling, Chris Hemsworth. ‘Cute’ = Good looking, charming personality, could be good boyfriend material. If we call a guy ‘sweet’ or ‘adorable’ then most likely we don’t want to sleep with him and just consider him a friend.
Never among any of my girlfriends however, have we described a guy as ‘cute’ to belittle him. smile, eyes, can even extend to personality. ‘Cute’ is generally used to describe a guy who has an attractive face, i.e. I didn’t even realize it either until a year ago and I’m 22 my apologies to guys everywhere if I’ve mistakenly offended you. I can see why guys are repulsed by the word ‘cute’ but it’s a word that gets thrown around by girls soo much that many don’t realize how many guys dislike it. A woman calling a man "cute" is similar to a man calling a woman "nice," which sharply undercuts your understanding that he adores you, or could adore you - or at the very least, that he sees you as a woman who could be adored. It relegates you to the realm of "mildly attractive," in the same way that "cute" relegates a man to the realm of "noted but ignored." Granted, this is not always what a woman means, since "cute" has gradually come to carry more and more weight as a typical descriptor for "attractive." But it is ambiguous at best to men, and still does very little to connote admiration. I remember thinking it sounded condescending and inappropriate – or, as my sophisticated 11-year old mind phrased it, "like he was a little bunny or something." I remember immediately questioning her use of the word, and making it clear to her that I hated it. Seventeen years later, my opinions haven't changed much, although they have been dulled somewhat by the word's increasingly common use.Īnyway, that was a long way of saying that I think the primal instinct in a man is to dislike or even hate being called " cute," or more specifically, we hate what "cute" implies. Men want to be admired, not adored, and this adjective doesn't exactly reinforce a man's confidence in a woman's admiration. I forget if the girl in question made the comment, or if it was one of her friends speaking on her behalf, but the salient response was that she thought our friend was "cute."
So of course we went as a group to confront her and her friends to investigate. I have a very poignant memory of the first time I heard a girl call a guy "cute." It was when I was about 11 years old. My friends and I were out in the playground during recess, and urgently needed to confirm a recent rumor that one of the girls in our class "liked" one of our friends. A reader recently asked what men think about being called "cute."