Use "neurotic|nemurotic" in a sentence

1. Horney proposes that people's basic anxiety would cause their neurotic needs and neurotic need for affection is the most important characteristic of neurotic trends.

2. As an intellectual, I feel neurotic.

3. You're just a neurotic, Blanche.

4. I hate being this neurotic.

5. He seemed a neurotic, self-obsessed man.

6. He was almost neurotic about being followed.

7. She accused him of being a neurotic.

8. Nothing is more distracting than a neurotic boss.

9. She became neurotic about keeping the house clean.

10. He was a murderous neurotic, and no loss to anyone.

11. In many respects, Mozart had a typically neurotic personality.

12. The children of overprotective parents are sometimes rather neurotic.

13. She's neurotic about switching lights off at home to save electricity.

14. The best producers are cutthroat, competitive, and often neurotic and paranoid.

15. 1 The children of overprotective parents are sometimes rather neurotic.

16. The central character of the play is a flaky neurotic.

17. Burnout often results from a neurotic compulsion to give it all away.

18. On the other, your colleagues pooh-pooh you as pessimistic or even neurotic.

19. Describing everyone as neurotic makes any distinction between normality and neurosis impossible.

20. The Anguish of the neurotic individual is the same as that of the saint

21. Neurotic Arseholes, Kommando Schwarzer Freitag: Neurotic Arseholes, Kommando Schwarzer Freitag - Solidaritätskonzert vom 28.4.84 im Kukoz Paderborn ‎ (Cass, Num, C-9) Perturbatic Et Pax - Tapes: PEP-Tapes 001: Germany: 1984: Sell This Version

22. He was a shy, neurotic man who found it difficult to make friends.

23. From an easygoing young girl, she had metamorphosed into a neurotic middle-aged woman.

24. An errant neurotic, failing to keep up the maintenance payments to support his own creation.

25. My mother is naturally neurotic and in her youth even dreamed of being an actress.

26. It cost money to rent a town centre flat and everyone was neurotic about burglars.

27. 4 From an easygoing young girl, she had metamorphosed into a neurotic middle-aged woman.

28. The conflict and its externalization finally reduce Blanche to a neurotic patient in the end.

29. 14 He tried hypnotism with his hysteric and neurotic patients, but gradually discarded the practice.

30. Chlordiazepoxide is used for treating neurotic conditions such as relieving feelings of fear, worry, and stress

31. 17 I am one of those melodramatic fools. Neurotic to the bone,(www.Sentencedict.com) no doubt about it.

32. Pop is hysteria, a neurotic symptom of what may well be the last days of Western capitalism.

33. A modest negative association was found between neurotic symptoms and availability of attachment and social integration.

34. Imagination and artistic creation are also, according to a strict interpretation of Freudian theory, neurotic symptoms.

35. I refuse to medicate patients with simple neurotic anxiety until they give aerobic exercises an adequate trial.”

36. Before dinner, John, who was so laid-back he made the trees seem neurotic, offered us a yoga lesson.

37. However, a much stronger negative association was found between neurotic symptoms and the perceived adequacy of social relationships.

38. How many people does one suppose really are so vile, so unbalanced, so neurotic, so decadent as to do this?

39. ‘Blanchett turns in another of her Actressy strong-woman performances.’ ‘As she gets ready to portray a neurotic New Yorker, she displays all the usual Actressy contradictions.’ ‘I would guess she wears a size 10, but looks hale and healthy rather than Actressy and neurotic.’

40. They are purely private means devised by the neurotic to achieve what is achieved in society by collective effort.

41. Moreover, her individual sense of fun and fantasy made her an enchanting companion, though a neurotic strain was also apparent.

42. The Tory party is often an amiable shambles, but the Maastricht process is turning it into a neurotic press gang.

43. My friends were confused about me, but I'd throw them off my trail by embracing the persona of a cynical, slightly neurotic fatalist.

44. Some people say the business about the jolly fat person is a myth, that all of us chubbies are neurotic, sick, sad people.

45. Martin Freeman as the neurotic in sketches from the short-lived, one-series-only sketch show 'Bruiser' (2000) starring Olivia Colman, Martin Freeman, Matt Ho

46. John Bogomil January 18 at 8:45 AM · Every person must defeat the chimera (illusion) of fear, otherwise he, by definition, remains an existential neurotic

47. Before I moved to Tokyo back in 19 I had read scads of articles about Japan's neurotic "education moms" and "cram schools" for the preschool set.

48. [3] Freud saw the same mechanism of Condensation at work in phantasies and neurotic symptoms, [4] as well as in parapraxis and jokes: he often cited as an

49. S2 E8 The Burds A neurotic man in his late twenties has convinced himself that he is destined to be one of the best rappers of all time

50. Beau (2011) 7min Short, Comedy, Horror A neurotic middle-aged man's trip (to visit his mother) is delayed indefinitely when his keys are mysteriously taken from his door

51. Return to the Coveted universe with several whimsical short stories featuring the delightfully neurotic werewolf Natalya Stravinsky and the rest of the zany supernatural inhabitants of South Toms River, New Jersey

52. In this year's race-and-class drama, Crash, the maid character was Browbeaten by a neurotic housewife played by Sandra Bullock, only to dutifully comfort her after the erstwhile Miss Congeniality fell down a …

53. A complicated and hazardous birth process coupled with hypoxia, a deficient oxygen supply, are held responsible for the more subtle neurotic effects that may show up later on in life when the person is subjected to additional stress.

54. 2007, January 27, “Vivien Schweitzer”, in Young Lovers, a Vespa and a Frolic by Rossini ‎ [1]: Signor Bruschino was updated from a generic Buffo character to an oily, scholarly-looking, suit-clad neurotic, excellently acted and sung by Marco Nistico.

55. A neurotic reaction marked by persistent feelings of mental and physical fatigue, diffuse “nervousness,” and vague aches and pains.The Asthenic patient feels that any exertion is too much for him, and finds it difficult to concentrate, make decisions, or carry any job through to completion

56. From former Adventure Time storyboard artist Skyler Page comes a Cartoon Network series about the Slice of Life antics of a bunch of elementary school-aged kids from the suburbs of Aberdale, focusing mainly on the titular chubby, perpetually optimistic and endearingly awkward Clarence, and often involving his two best friends, neurotic goody-goody Jeff and mischief-maker Sumo.

57. Alexander Woollcott and Harpo Marx both came of age in the pre-­war New York that Chauncey describes, and, if their relationship was not a consummated homosexual pairing, it seems nonetheless to have partaken of the dynamics of fairy and trade—Uncle Acky, uptown, effeminate, neurotic, and verbal, and Little Harpo, downtown, masculine, cocky

58. 1944, from a specialized use in psychology of German Angst "neurotic fear, anxiety, guilt, remorse," from Old High German Angust, from Proto-Germanic *Angustu- (source also of Old Frisian ongost, Old High German Angust, Middle Dutch ancst "fear," also Old English enge, Old Saxon engi, Gothic aggwus "narrow"), from PIE *anghosti-, suffixed form of root *angh-"tight, painfully

59. They understand the structural integrity of a deep Avuncular lap, as compared to the shaky arrangement of a neurotic niece in high heels.: Entienden la integridad estructural de un profundo regazo Avuncular, en comparación con la disposición temblorosa de una sobrina neurótica con tacones altos.: He also retains much of his cynical, Avuncular attitude and brusque manner with his staff

60. Angst (n.) 1944, from a specialized use in psychology of German Angst "neurotic fear, anxiety, guilt, remorse," from Old High German Angust, from Proto-Germanic *Angustu-(source also of Old Frisian ongost, Old High German Angust, Middle Dutch ancst "fear," also Old English enge, Old Saxon engi, Gothic aggwus "narrow"), from PIE *anghosti-, suffixed form of root *angh-"tight, painfully