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hysteria
[hi-ster-ee-uh, -steer-]
noun
an uncontrollable outburst of emotion or fear, often characterized by irrationality, laughter, weeping, etc.
Psychoanalysis., a psychoneurotic disorder characterized by violent emotional outbreaks, disturbances of sensory and motor functions, and various abnormal effects due to autosuggestion.
Psychiatry., conversion disorder.
hysteria
/ hɪˈstɪərɪə /
noun
a mental disorder characterized by emotional outbursts, susceptibility to autosuggestion, and, often, symptoms such as paralysis that mimic the effects of physical disorders See also conversion disorder
any frenzied emotional state, esp of laughter or crying
Other Word Forms
- subhysteria noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of hysteria1
Word History and Origins
Origin of hysteria1
Example Sentences
This led to hysteria, with fans attacking the barriers, shouting and pleading that they were disabled and needed to leave.
But at the height of anti-communist hysteria, real estate interests, seeing their profits threatened by public housing, launch a successful campaign against it, financing opposition groups that call it “socialist housing.”
"There are moments that feel incredibly heightened - you're out of breath, facing elements of hysteria - but it's brilliant."
She talked me down from my hysteria, and somehow, like cat people can, convinced me to honor my commitment.
The imperfect protagonist of “The Crucible” takes a heroic stand against the mass hysteria that is turning his Salem neighbors viciously against one another.
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