0 (in psychology) to divert the energy derived from an instinctual feeling, especially a sexual one, into a more socially acceptable activity -- chế ngự
All desires and energies should be sublimated into pursuit of these goals-national goals of economic, political, and cultural advancement.
They sublimate, evaporate, then get exposed to the cold.
The two peptides were shown to partially sublimate as confirmed by ground-based experiments.
The earth and its riches are protected by it and arranged in horizontal harmony, sublimating a this-sided world.
The appalling realities of child labour were sublimated into an ideal that would appease the audience.
If the salt had a low boiling point, the result was a distillate or sublimate, just like the animal and vegetable distillates.
In short, faithful reporting of observed events often became sublimated to larger moral issues.
He does not, of course, address the question that absorbed some of the scholars - whether the carnal aspect of male love must necessarily be sublimated.