subconscious
IPA: sʌbkˈɑnʃʌs
noun
- (psychology, dated) Synonym of unconscious.
adjective
- Partially conscious.
- (psychology, dated) Synonym of unconscious.
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Examples of "subconscious" in Sentences
- Freud never mentioned the subconscious.
- He lives in a realm of the subconscious.
- But who knows the way of the subconscious
- But let's keep it in the realm of the subconscious.
- Hebbian engrams are not of the subconscious nature.
- It is a manifestation of the subconscious in the brain.
- It's the way it subconsciously plays on your anxieties.
- I guess my subconscious is trying to tell me something, LOL!
- These are heard by the subconscious but not the conscious mind.
- It explores the boundary between the conscious and subconscious mind.
- I think that is something that is really subconsciously in our minds.
- The term subconscious is used in many different contexts and has no single or precise definition.
- The term subconscious, as it occurs in the literature of psychology, is a word of various meanings.
- Some of the functions are preprogrammed and controlled by what we refer to as the subconscious mind.
- The term subconscious is defined as existing or operating in the mind beneath or beyond conscious awareness.
- What I do not need, o subconscious, is a set of constant and vivid reminders of these things popping up in nightmare form.
- In any case, this tale tells us about an alien species that through its link to our subconscious is able to determine our every desire and fulfill it instantly.
- Garden of the Mind which has levels from the conscious mind, or pea, to relaxed awareness and creativity, the carrot, to the onion, which she called the subconscious, where we find memory and what's repressed.
- I suppose none of us doubts that there is such a thing as the power of suggestion and that it can produce very great results indeed, and that it is _par excellence_ a hidden power; it works behind the scenes, it works through what we know as the subconscious mind, and consequently its activity is not immediately recognisable, or the source from which it comes.
- Psychiatry was invented by a man named Freud and was based on his theory that people had no way of knowing why they were unhappy or behaved peculiarly, because the origins of the problem were hidden from them, lurking in what he called the subconscious, and only a trained, expensive specialist could uncover and uproot them over the course of a long, expensive treatment.
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