0 present participle of ruminate
2 (of particular types of animal) to bring up food from the stomach and chew it again
This raises the possibility that depressed patients may be ruminating at a ceiling level prior to receiving response inductions.
One such devotional practice was the making of rapiaria, or notebooks of especially valuable scriptural texts for ruminating during meditation.
For those receiving the distraction induction, mood improved in all patients and problem-solving improved in patients who were not naturally ruminating at a high level.
Ruminating when depressed is thought to lower mood and impair problem-solving, while distraction is thought to alleviate mood and assist problem-solving.
These pairs are analogous, first, to walking through part of a museum, seeing and ruminating; and second, to that part of the museum itself.
Rather, it may be that only when adolescent girls are ruminating about failures and setbacks in pursuing personal goals is selfdiscrepancy a contributory factor for depression.
Ostertagia ostertagi in neonatal calves : establishment of infection in ruminating and non-ruminating calves.
Most people in the 1950s were grappling with the present, not ruminating on the past, and private concerns were what took centre stage most of the time.