0 to not allow something, especially feelings, to be expressed:
1 to prevent feelings, desires, or ideas from being expressed:
In the end, it was impossible to repress her emotions.
The government repressed all reports from the region.
All other imprinted genes in this cluster are paternally repressed, some ubiquitously and others in the placenta.
At times, they seem to require sociolinguists, linguistic anthropologists, and discourse analysts to reinvent themselves as field psychoanalysts, ascribing repressed desires to those they study.
Rather, it is useful because it presents quite frankly the symptoms of generic uncertainty that are repressed (but rarely entirely absent) in the "typical" case.
The process of rationalization is one of several defense mechanisms against the consequences of guilty thought and feelings having been repressed into the unconscious.
Paradoxically, the full seriousness of the story's engagement with the uncanny and the repressed is released only when it is read as parody.
If the memory is repressed then it goes unrehearsed, at least consciously.
Finally, people may believe that a particular traumatic event occurred and was repressed when, in fact, it did not happen in the first place.
The group discussions corroborate previous insights by attesting that conflict in public discussion is generally latent and often repressed.
中文繁体
壓抑,壓制,克制(尤指感情), (尤指用武力)鎮壓,壓制,制止…
More中文简体
压抑,压制,克制(尤指感情), (尤指用武力)镇压,压制,制止…
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reprimir, contener…
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reprimir, conter…
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bastırmak, zaptetmek, tutmak…
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réprimer…
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potlačit…
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undertrykke…
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