free association in English

noun
1
the mental process by which one word or image may spontaneously suggest another without any apparent connection.
Before I started drafting the piece, I sat down and wrote out about two pages of free association , just listing images that fit with two of the themes of the story.
2
the forming of a group, political alliance, or other organization without any constraint or external restriction.
it would violate their First Amendment rights of free association and free expression

Use "free association" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "free association" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "free association", or refer to the context using the word "free association" in the English Dictionary.

1. Sigmund Freud used free association.

2. This would violate their constitutional right of free association.

3. It was to be a free association of equal partners.

4. In 1965 residents chose self-government in free association with New Zealand.

5. Remember, one of the fundamental freedoms is the right of free association.

6. What's the relationship between body sense and creation about painting line and free association?

7. The Commonwealth is a free association of independent countries that were once colonies of Britain.

8. It's the emotional reflection by linearity draws and the representation machinery by free association in technics.

9. She told me over the phone, "As Freud used free association and dream analysis, I use nakedness."

10. This technique of free association is a contribution to psychology which is used widely by psychotherapists, including behaviourists.

11. In this respect, Woolf usually employs such techniques as internal analysis, internal monologue, recollection, free association, and symbolic marks.

12. In experiment twenty-three two-character words selected from thirteen sentences were used as stimuli in a free association test.

13. The anarchist and communist concept of free association is often considered utopian or too abstract to guide a transforming society.

14. Freud later developed the technique of free association, a triumph which is often neglected in the discussion of his controversial theories.

15. Everyone knows, everyone can see, everyone can have experienced, that my discourse, of course, here, is not one of free association.

16. Content: the spirit of treatment method to explain Freud, mechanism of a kind of patients is free association method treatment are discussed.

17. Life of Ma Parker" depicts Ma Parker's tragic life by means of two modern techniques such as interior monologue and free association."

18. Free association tests and projective techniques are commonly used to uncover the tangible and intangible attributes, attitudes, and intentions about a brand.

19. If you believe that men should be free , then, they should have the right of free association, of free speech, of free publication.

20. The results indicated that semantic distance in terms of commonsense relations between words is useful to predict the performance of the free association test.

21. In addition, a lot of free association, ingenious narrative style and plentiful deep meaning shape the artistic monument-The Old Man and the Sea.

22. The Marxian socialists and communists generally differ from anarchists in claiming that there must be an intermediate stage between the capitalist society and free association.

23. D. dissertation on Naked Therapy," according to her website. She told me over the phone, "As Freud used free association and dream analysis, I use nakedness.

24. Maintained on company servers and open to the public, these blogs are used by many high-tech workers for debate, free association, and collecting input about projects.

25. This is why we have joined together in NATO in a free association of countries united not only by common political philosophies, but by the will to resist.

26. Chunking across is akin to promoting free association; that is to say that connections can be made between objects that initially appear to have no relation to each other

27. Automatism plays a role in Surrealists techniques such as spontaneous or automatic writing, painting, and drawing; free association of images and words; and collaborative creation though games like Exquisite Corpse.

28. He hoped to feel better after each visit, but rarely did, even after a session with a Jungian analyst who fell fast asleep during his patient's "free association" on the couch.

29. Anarchism definition is - a political theory holding all forms of governmental authority to be unnecessary and undesirable and advocating a society based on voluntary cooperation and free association of individuals and groups.

30. Contradistinction livret support uivelo, Mergus albellus tragic ledenica superstition Hard column break certainty (n.) rhizome Lesefehler beim Zugriff auf ein Peripheriegerät termen general braniti se svim silama expulse jinkaisenjutsu telecode (n.), teleprinter code (n.) free association merci electric tvoji sperm whale pecivo pantin zile

31. Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "Cerebration"): free association (a thought process in which ideas (words or images) suggest other ideas in a sequence) construction ; mental synthesis (the creation of a construct; the process of combining ideas into a congruous object of thought)

32. Commonwealth, also called Commonwealth of Nations, formerly (1931–49) British Commonwealth of Nations, a free association of sovereign states comprising the United Kingdom and a number of its former dependencies who have chosen to maintain ties of friendship and practical cooperation and who acknowledge the British monarch as symbolic head of their association.

33. The Anathemata is one moment of epiphany, daydream, free-association, and stream-of-consciousness: the idea or conceit underpinning it is that the entire poem consists of seven seconds in the thought processes of an English Catholic during Mass, when his mind wanders to thoughts (if we can call them ‘thoughts’) of England and Wales’s distant past.