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obsession
/ əbˈsɛʃən /
noun
psychiatry a persistent idea or impulse that continually forces its way into consciousness, often associated with anxiety and mental illness
a persistent preoccupation, idea, or feeling
the act of obsessing or the state of being obsessed
obsession
A preoccupation with a feeling or idea. In psychology, an obsession is similar to a compulsion.
Other Word Forms
- obsessional adjective
- nonobsession noun
- nonobsessional adjective
- self-obsession noun
- obsessionally adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of obsession1
Example Sentences
But none of this would happen if India, and Indians, could wean themselves off their obsession with cough syrups.
Without giving too much away, Witherspoon and Coben in this novel have tapped into the wealthy’s obsession with using technology to foster super-agers.
“Driven by isolation, psychosis and an all-consuming obsession with his mother, Gein’s perverse crimes birthed a new kind of monster that would haunt Hollywood for decades.”
While animal sacrifice is a real part of some ceremonies, the media’s obsession with this particular practice has created a distorted picture that reduces an entire spiritual system to a single, sensationalized act.
But Loudermilk is partially justifying his ongoing obsession about Jan. 6 as if there was some dark cover-up.
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