If I'm going to use the verb ''to pleasure", could I use it with the preposition "in" as in "I'm going to be pleasuring in seeing you for a while." to mean "seeking pleasure in"?
No. "To pleasure" means "to give pleasure to someone else" or "to make someone else feel happy". It also has a sexual connotation so be careful how you use it.
For your sentence, you probably need "I'm going to take pleasure in being with you for a while" or something similar, although "I'm going to enjoy your company for a while" would be much better.
"" Responses in letters to the editor included such remarks as these: critics of Levin's ilk " serve only the continued dominance of a particular gender, class, and culture " by appealing to pleasure in literary study (Daniel Boyarin, 1991)" Would it be conveying any sexual meaning here?
Furthermore, my Webster gives two definitions that are not sex related. 1)to take pleasure: delight 2)to seek pleasure
Last edited by ostap77; 09-Feb-2012 at 20:56.