0 to engage or occupy (a person’s mind etc) or the attention of (someone) completely -- ครอบครองก่อน
For some it was difficult not to "be stuck" or preoccupied with their illness.
One might expect it, nonetheless, to include or at least allude to discussion of events that have preoccupied recent historians.
Adults are assigned to one of three primary categories (dismissing, preoccupied, or autonomous) on the basis of qualitative characteristics of the narrative.
Fearful adults scored extremely low and significantly lower than preoccupied and dismissing adults on the histrionic and narcissistic dimensions.
Geologists had little social reason to be preoccupied with the apparatus of certification, licensing, accreditation, and other professional functions.
The relationship between activity and wellbeing in later life has long preoccupied social gerontologists.
It becomes apparent that the author is preoccupied with matters other than the fortunes of primitive art.
In this respect, the report was preoccupied with an alleged increase in juvenile delinquency.