Cara Delevingne has described her sexuality as a swinging "pendulum".
The 28-year-old model-turned-actress has famously dated people of different genders - which includes a rumored fling with Harry Styles, a confirmed romance with songstress St. Vincent and most recently a two-year relationship with Pretty Little Liars star Ashley Benson.
Last year, in an interview with Variety, Cara confirmed that she identifies as pansexual, weeks after ending her relationship with Ashley, 31.
Pansexuality revolves around attraction to people regardless of their sex or gender identity. Bisexuality is defined as an attraction to a person's own gender and those of other genders - but does not necessarily mean one cannot have a preference within that scope.
Over a year after the interview, she is opening up further on her sexuality.

During the recent Pride episode of podcast Make It Reign with Josh Smith, she said: "The way I define myself still changes all the time, whether it’s pansexual, bisexual - I don’t really know.
"It’s like a pendulum swinging, but almost now I feel far more comfortable being bisexual than I used to. I’ve kind of felt because I was lacking in my desire for women or love for women that I kind of just went one way and now it changes a lot more."
She added: "I feel a lot more free and being more comfortable in it because before I was like, 'oh, I'm gay'. That comes with self-shaming."
The Paper Towns star also spoke about the significance Pride has for her personally.
She said: "That’s what I think Pride needs to be about. It’s just love, love for your partner, love for your neighbor, love for yourself more importantly, and loving people you don’t know either.
"Like, it just doesn’t have to be something you talk about where it’s just about a relationship. It can just be about a stranger, you know, having empathy and compassion for all people."
Last year, Cara told Variety: "Pride to me is a sense of something that I never really had as a kid. A sense of pride is like a sense of belonging, a family outside your family, a place where you don’t have to apologize or feel ashamed. I guess I never felt like I belonged anywhere as a kid."