verbal opposition

  • 1verbal — has four meanings, all close enough to cause possible confusion: (1) ‘having the nature of a verb’ (verbal noun), (2) involving words rather than actual things • (Opposition between these two modes of speaking is rather verbal than real B. Jowett …

    Modern English usage

  • 2opposition — [ ɔpozisjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1165 « objection »; lat. oppositio I ♦ 1 ♦ (1370) Rapport de choses opposées qui ne peuvent coexister sans se nuire; de personnes que leurs opinions, leurs intérêts dressent l une contre l autre. ⇒ antagonisme, combat,… …

    Encyclopédie Universelle

  • 3OPPOSITION (CONCEPT D’) — Le concept d’opposition, sous ses deux formes fondamentales de la contradiction et de la contrariété, est l’un des acquis les plus anciens de la logique formelle, telle que le modèle en a été formulé par Aristote, à partir de l’analyse des… …

    Encyclopédie Universelle

  • 4verbal hallucination —    Also known as phonemic hallucination. The origin of the term verbal hallucination is unknown, but it was used by classic authors such as the French psychiatrist Louis Jules Ernest Séglas (1856 1939) and the German neurologist and psychiatrist… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 5Opposition to Christianity in Chazalic literature — This page is presented as a neutral analysis of the pseudo literary opposition to Christianity found in Chazalic documentary, for additional material and other views see Anti Christian sentiment In a collective approach to the volume of Rabbinic… …

    Wikipedia

  • 6verbal impulse —    The French term impulsion verbale was introduced in or shortly before 1888 by the French psychiatrist Louis Jules Ernest Séglas (18561939) to denote a type of *psychic hallucination. Under the heading ofverbal impulses Séglas subsumed such… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 7PSYCHANALYSE ET CONCEPT D’OPPOSITION — La découverte des processus inconscients, liée à celle du conflit intrapsychique, se formule fréquemment sous la plume de Freud par le vocable d’opposition (Gegensatz ) et, à l’occasion, par l’un de ses dérivés, d’une importance théorique… …

    Encyclopédie Universelle

  • 8non-affective verbal hallucination —    A term featuring in the 1974 Present State Examination (PSE) schedule, developed by the British psychiatrists John Kenneth Wing et al. As defined in the PSE, the notion of non affective verbal hallucination may refer to two distinct types of… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 9affective or non-specific verbal hallucination —    A term featuring in the 1974 Present State Examination (PSE) schedule, developed by the British psychiatrists John Kenneth Wing et al. As defined in the PSE, the expression affective or nonspecific verbal hallucination refers to a variant of… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 10Critical Masses: Opposition to Nuclear Power in California, 1958-1978 — is the first detailed history of the anti nuclear movement in the United States, written by Thomas Wellock. It is also the first state level research on the subject with a focus on California.[1][2] Reviewer Paula Garb has said: The book is rich… …

    Wikipedia