hysteric neurosis
1hysterical neurosis — noun neurotic disorder characterized by violent emotional outbreaks and disturbances of sensory and motor functions • Syn: ↑hysteria • Derivationally related forms: ↑hysteric (for: ↑hysteria), ↑hysterical (for: ↑ …
2Lata — La ta, Latah La tah, n. [Malay.] A convulsive tic or hysteric neurosis prevalent among Malays, similar to or identical with miryachit and jumping disease, the person affected performing various involuntary actions and making rapid inarticulate… …
3Latah — Lata La ta, Latah La tah, n. [Malay.] A convulsive tic or hysteric neurosis prevalent among Malays, similar to or identical with miryachit and jumping disease, the person affected performing various involuntary actions and making rapid… …
4lata — n. Malay name for a hysteric neurosis characterized by the obsessive imitation of the speech and actions of others (also latah) …
5latah — n. Malay name for a hysteric neurosis characterized by the obsessive imitation of the speech and actions of others (also lata) …
6Personality Disorders — Even though upsetting behavior is as old as the human condition, systematic attention to disorders of the personality appears relatively late in the development of psychiatry. On the whole, the asylum generation of psychiatrists had little to… …
7Depression: Emergence — The word depression has a number of meanings, depending on the discipline. Within neurophysiology, it refers to a decrease in the brain’s electrical activity causing, for example, cortical depression. For the pharmacologist, depression means… …
8Depression and Mood Disorders: Emergence — The word depression has a number of meanings, depending on the discipline. Within neurophysiology, it refers to a decrease in the brain’s electrical activity causing, for example, cortical depression. For the pharmacologist, depression means… …
9psychoneurotic — I noun a person suffering from neurosis • Syn: ↑neurotic, ↑mental case • Derivationally related forms: ↑neurotic (for: ↑neurotic) • Hypernyms …
10Hysteria — In 1802, Paris psychiatrist Jean Baptiste Louyer Villermay (1775–1837), in an essay differentiating hypochondria from hysteria, described a young female patient, uncertain about romance, who, at the sight of her loved one fainted, uttering… …
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