Climax in a sentence as a noun

They used it as the climax of a Bond movie!

So, are two hours of visual effects enough to build up the climax of the story?

After being told he could bring a woman to climax with the way he ate dinner, he used "#Pyladies?

I find that its hard to communicate with young people about the weird way in which sexual climax is plugged into your brain.

Guys with huge penises that take 45 mins to climax, women with huge breasts that love to get finished on, etc, is not how most of the world is.

" This sentence correlates exactly with the climax of that article.

Climax in a sentence as a verb

The subtle shifting increases as the ad comes to its climax adding more motion to an otherwise still plane which, to me, cements the idea that this is intentional.

I did my best to think of porn and at least play along, but part of me felt that was more rude than just failing to climax so I sat back and let my partner enjoy her share.

All stories follow a predictable arc: exposition, conflict, climax, conclusion, and denouement [1].

This reminds me of an Amtrak ride along the CA coast, where the 50yo man next to me enjoyed sparring w/ the young female stewardess/whatever over the course of several hours, until the climax: he offered to take her into a bathroom and put her on a diaper changing table.

There's an incredibly important climax:"[T]he real disillusionment isn’t the discovery that you’re unlikely to become a billionaire; it’s the realization that your feeling of autonomy is a fantasy, and that the vast majority of you have been set up to fail by design.

Climax definitions

noun

the highest point of anything conceived of as growing or developing or unfolding; "the climax of the artist's career"; "in the flood tide of his success"

noun

the decisive moment in a novel or play; "the deathbed scene is the climax of the play"

See also: culmination

noun

the moment of most intense pleasure in sexual intercourse

See also: orgasm coming

noun

the most severe stage of a disease

noun

arrangement of clauses in ascending order of forcefulness

verb

end, especially to reach a final or climactic stage; "The meeting culminated in a tearful embrace"

See also: culminate