AN alleged rape victim has denied 'demonstrating enjoyment' at what prosecutors say was a sex attack with a man she met online.

Christopher Schubert is currently on trial at Oxford Crown Court facing two counts of rape and two counts of assault by penetration.

Prosecutors say that he met his victim through internet dating site match.com before going to her Oxfordshire home in January last year and raping her.

The 44-year-old of Orchard Close, St Neots, Cambridgeshire, denies any wrong-doing.

READ AGAIN: The opening of the case at court on Monday.

As his trial continued yesterday defence barrister Ruby Selva quizzed the alleged victim - who cannot be named for legal reasons - on her account.

She put to the woman that during the alleged assault she was 'demonstrating enjoyment at the situation.' The woman replied: "Absolutely not."

The jury was also told that after the incident and once her alleged attacker had left she began searching the internet asking 'how do I know I have been raped.'

Asked why she had sought this out she said it was because she 'didn't yell stop' or scream in the attack. She told jurors that the depiction of a rapist was 'at knife-point by a stranger'.

She said: "I invited him to my home, I took him up to my bedroom and I kissed him" and added she was 'in conflict with her own understanding' of what had happened.

READ ALSO: Cars seized from no-parking zone in Edward Street, Abingdon.

It was put to her that the sex at her home was 'consensual' and that one of the sex assaults did not happen, both assertions which she denied.

The woman also denied that she was in the 'doggy-style' position during the sexual intercourse, and went on to say that she remained in a 'foetal' position with her back to her alleged attacker.

During re-examination with prosecutor Charles Ward-Jackson she went on to say that she 'froze' during the rape.

She said: "At first I initially thought that nothing would happen because I had already said downstairs nothing would happen.

READ ALSO: Rate of Oxfordshire pupils struggling with mental health tops national average.

"But now I know I just froze, I absolutely froze."

Earlier in the trial Mr Ward-Jackson said the pair had shared initial exchanges after meeting via match.com

He said they were 'flirtatious in tone' and 'what you might think was sexual banter.'

He added that while at her house there was 'kissing and cuddling' but there was no 'explicit plan' for further sexual activity that night.

Jurors were told that the resulting ordeal caused 'excruciating' pain for the woman and that the sex was not consensual.

The trial continues.