psychoanalysts in English

noun
1
a person who practices psychoanalysis.
For example, Freud analysed his own daughter Anna over a period of several years, a flagrant violation of psychoanalytic principles which most psychoanalysts would condemn.
noun
    analyst

Use "psychoanalysts" in a sentence

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

1. 10 Psychoanalysts aim to explore the deepest/innermost recesses of the mind.

2. Psychoanalysts tend to regard both sadism and masochism as arising from childhood deprivation.

3. 23 Psychoanalysts tend to regard both sadism and masochism as arising from childhood deprivation.

4. 1 Psychoanalysts tend to regard both sadism and masochism as arising from childhood deprivation.

5. Pages in category " Analysands of psychoanalysts" This category contains only the following page

6. 15 Psychoanalysts tend to regard both sadism and masochism as arising from childhood deprivation.

7. He and other psychoanalysts have relied on dreams recollected during therapy sessions, or those they could recall themselves.

8. Pages in category "Analysands of psychoanalysts" This category contains only the following page

9. 7 By 19 when the psychoanalysts attempted to reintroduce masochism, a backlash against feminism, against uppity women,(www.Sentencedict.com) was current.

10. By 19 when the psychoanalysts attempted to reintroduce masochism, a backlash against feminism, against uppity women, was current.

11. Abreaction, Abreaction therapy A term used by psychoanalysts to refer to the process of releasing repressed emotions by reliving in the imagination a previous negative experience

12. 27 These half way conditions have long been of interest, though until recently mainly among psychoanalysts or other writers outside mainstream psychiatry.

13. Countertransference Freud 1910–psychoanalysts unconscious response to patient, patient’s transference, stressing the need for analyst to overcome this as it is an obstacle to successful treatment

14. Lillian Hellman in The Little Foxes (1939) Your universities teach you to be eternal cynics, a Cynicism that can be only drowned in alcohol and diet pills and psychoanalysts and golf.

15. The same or different? The psychoanalytic terms “holding” and “Containing” originate, from the writings of two prominent psychoanalysts: ‘Holding’ in the papers of Winnicott (1960); ‘Containing’ in the papers of Bion (1962).

16. ‘First it is a communication between psychoanalysts, Analysands and supervisees.’ More example sentences ‘That is perfectly acceptable, but then it is important that you consciously state what you think an analysand comes to a psychoanalyst for and what you think the function of a psychoanalyst is, because based on that all-else follows.’

17. The emigration, voluntary or enforced, of psychoanalysts from central Europe to Britain and the United States from the 1930s onward has been explored in depth and detail over the last decades, with important work on, among related topics, “Freud in exile.”1 Less fully documented and explored are the experiences, in the 1920s and 1930s, of those British Analysands and training