emotionalism – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
emotionalism
n.
tendency to express one's feelings in an overly dramatic manner, effusiveness, sentimentalism
Emotionalism
Emotionalism, in its meaning as a research paradigm, refers to an approach to conducting
research studies that provides a gateway to understanding people's experiences through the use of social inquiry methodologies such as
ethnography.
emotionalism
Noun
1. emotional nature or quality
(synonym) emotionality
(hypernym) trait
(hyponym) drama
(attribute) emotional
Emotionalism
(n.)
The cultivation of an emotional state of mind; tendency to regard things in an emotional manner.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
emotionalism
Synonyms and related words:
abstraction, abulia, agitability, alienation, anxiety, anxiety equivalent, anxiety state, apathy, blood and thunder, catatonic stupor, combustibility, compulsion, dejection, demonstrativeness, depression, detachment, edginess, elation, emotional appeal, emotional instability, emotionality, emotionalization, emotionalizing, emotiveness, emotivity, eruptiveness, euphoria, excitability, excitableness, explosiveness, folie du doute, histrionics, human interest, hypochondria, hysteria, hysterics, indifference, inflammability, insensibility, irascibility, irritability, latent violence, lethargy, love interest, making scenes, mania, melancholia, melodrama, melodramatics, mental distress, nervousness, nonrationalness, obsession, pathological indecisiveness, perturbability, preoccupation, prickliness, psychalgia, psychomotor disturbance, sensationalism, sensitivity, skittishness, startlishness, stupor, tempestuousness, theatricality, theatrics, tic, touchiness, twitching, unreasoningness, unresponsiveness, violence, visceralness, withdrawal, yellow journalism,
Source: Moby Thesaurus, which is part of the
Moby Project created by Grady Ward. In 1996 Grady Ward placed this thesaurus in the public domain.