Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Obsessive–compulsive personality disorder" ¶ 29
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

:# and excessive
:# Marked and persistent fear that is excessive or unreasonable, cued by the presence or anticipation of a specific object or situation ( e. g., flying, heights, animals, receiving an injection, seeing blood ).
:# The person recognizes that the fear is excessive or unreasonable.
:# The person recognized that the fear is excessive or unreasonable.
:# Impulsivity in at least two areas that are potentially self-damaging ( e. g., promiscuous sex, excessive spending, eating disorders, binge eating, substance abuse, reckless driving ).
:# Requires excessive admiration
:# feelings of excessive doubt and caution ;
:# excessive conscientiousness, scrupulousness, and undue preoccupation with productivity to the exclusion of pleasure and interpersonal relationships ;
:# excessive sensitivity to setbacks and rebuffs ;
:# tendency to experience excessive self-importance, manifest in a persistent self-referential attitude ;

:# and adherence
:# Any religion whose only fruit is adherence to itself is a pseudo-religion.

:# and social
:# The avoidance, anxious anticipation or distress in the feared situation ( s ) interferes significantly with the person's normal routine, occupational ( or academic ) functioning, or social activities or relationships, or there is marked distress about having the phobia.
:# The anxiety, panic attack, or phobic avoidance associated with the specific object or situation are not better accounted for by another mental disorder, such as Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ( e. g., fear of dirt in someone with an obsession about contamination ), Posttraumatic Stress Disorder ( e. g., avoidance of stimuli associated with a severe stressor ), Separation Anxiety Disorder ( e. g., avoidance of school ), Social Phobia ( e. g., avoidance of social situations because of fear of embarrassment ), Panic Disorder With Agoraphobia, or Agoraphobia Without History of Panic Disorder.
:# A marked and persistent fear of one or more social or performance situations in which the person is exposed to unfamiliar people or to possible scrutiny by others.
:# Exposure to the feared social situation almost invariably provokes anxiety, which may take the form of a situationally bound or situationally predisposed Panic Attack.
:# The feared social or performance situations are avoided or else are endured with intense anxiety or distress.
:# The avoidance, anxious anticipation, or distress in the feared social or performance situation ( s ) interferes significantly with the person's normal routine, occupational ( academic ) functioning, or social activities or relationships, or there is marked distress about having the phobia.
:# If a general medical condition or another mental disorder is present, the fear in Criterion A ( Exposure to the social or performance situation almost invariably provokes an immediate anxiety response ) is unrelated to it, e. g., the fear is not of Stuttering, trembling in Parkinson's disease, or exhibiting abnormal eating behavior in Anorexia Nervosa or Bulimia Nervosa.
:# Gross and persistent attitude of irresponsibility and disregard for social norms, rules, and obligations.
:# failure to conform to social norms with respect to lawful behaviors as indicated by repeatedly performing acts that are grounds for arrest ;
:# The person is a non-stock organization ( such as a social club, homeowners association, etc.
:# Indifference to social norms and conventions.
:# Support us in our struggle against those who would fire us from our jobs, evict us from our homes, refuse to touch us or separate us from our loved ones, our community or our peers, since available evidence does not support the view that AIDS can be spread by casual, social contact.
:# To quality medical treatment and quality social service provision without discrimination of any form including sexual orientation, gender, diagnosis, economic status or race.

:# and ;
Alphabets: < span style =" background-color: lightblue ; color: white ;"> Armenian alphabet | Armenian </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# 008080 ; color: white ;"> Cyrillic | < font color =" white "> Cyrillic </ font color > </ span >, < span style =" background-color: brown ; color: white ;"> Georgian alphabet | < font color =" white "> Georgian </ font color > </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# 0000FF ; color: white ;"> Greek alphabet | < font color =" white "> Greek </ font color > </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# AAAAAA ; color: black ;"> Latin script | Latin </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# CCFF99 ; color: black ;"> Latin ( and Arabic script | Arabic ) </ span >, < span style =" background-color: cyan ; color: black ;"> Latin and Cyrillic </ span > Abjads: Arabic script | < span style =" background-color: green ; color: white ;"> Arabic </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# 00ff7f ; color: black ;"> Hebrew alphabet | Hebrew </ span > Abugidas: < span style =" background-color :# FFC000 ; color: black ;"> Indic scripts | North Indic </ span >, < span style =" background-color: orange ; color: black ;"> Indic scripts | South Indic </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# 66FF00 ; color: white ;"> Ge ' ez script | Ge ' ez </ span >, < span style =" background-color: olive ; color: white ;"> < font color =" white "> Tāna </ font > </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# FFFF80 ; color: black ;"> Canadian Aboriginal syllabics | Canadian Syllabic and Latin </ span > Logographic + syllabic: < span style =" background-color: red ; color: white ;"> Pure logographic </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# DC143C ; color: white ;"> Mixed logographic and syllabaries </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# FF00FF ; color: black ;"> Featural-alphabetic syllabary + limited logographic </ span >, < span style =" background-color :# 800080 ; color: white ;"> Featural-alphabetic syllabary </ span >

excessive and pedantry
Tsu sometimes involves excessive obsession and cultural ( but not academic ) pedantry, and in this case, it differs from iki, which will not be obsessive.
Woolley is always quick to point out the physical impossibilities of Sir Humphrey's or Hacker's mixed metaphors, with almost excessive pedantry.

excessive and adherence
The term is sometimes used outside academia, often with meanings tangential to or opposite to the sociological usage ( for example, applying it to a church ), with the use intended as a derogatory description of excessive adherence to something political or ideological.

excessive and social
Economists generally agree that certain amounts of inequality are necessary and desirable but that excessive inequality leads to efficiency problems and social injustice.
This " excessive democracy ," Madison grew to believe, was the cause of a larger social decay which he and others ( such as Washington ) believed had resumed after the revolution and was nearing a tipping point.
Other common leftist concerns such as pacifism, social justice, racial equality, human rights, and the rejection of excessive wealth can be found in the Bible.
Political correctness ( adjectivally, politically correct ; both forms commonly abbreviated to PC ) is a term which denotes language, ideas, policies, and behavior seen as seeking to minimize social and institutional offense in occupational, gender, racial, cultural, sexual orientation, certain other religions, beliefs or ideologies, disability, and age-related contexts, and, as purported by the term, doing so to an excessive extent.
West European social critics, including Robert Owen, Charles Fourier, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Louis Blanc, Charles Hall and Saint-Simon, were the first modern socialists who criticised the excessive poverty and inequality of the Industrial Revolution.
Formal public institutions require social capital in order to function properly, and while it is possible to have too much social capital ( resulting in rapid changes and excessive regulation ), it is decidedly worse to have too little.
It is found that while social capital can bring about positive effect of maintaining an encompassing functional community in norm-enforcing schools, it also brings about the negative consequence of excessive monitoring.
Other critics of the Homo economicus model of humanity, such as Bruno Frey, point to the excessive emphasis on extrinsic motivation ( rewards and punishments from the social environment ) as opposed to intrinsic motivation.
Flappers were seen as brash for wearing excessive makeup, drinking, treating sex in a casual manner, smoking, driving automobiles and otherwise flouting social and sexual norms.
Apparent shyness, as perceived by others, may simply be the manifestation of reservation or introversion, character traits which cause an individual to voluntarily avoid excessive social contact or be terse in communication, but are not motivated or accompanied by discomfort, apprehension, or lack of confidence.
Other common leftist concerns such as pacifism, social justice, racial equality, human rights, and the rejection of excessive wealth are also expressed strongly in the Bible.
* Social anxiety disorder, a diagnosis referring to excessive anxiety in social situations
A new rent law provided the government with the power to issue decrees prohibiting excessive rent increases, while more funds were allocated to social housing.
Eighteen percent of study participants were considered to be pathological Internet users, whose excessive use of the Internet was causing academic, social, and interpersonal problems.
" He goes on to make the key point that political, social and economic conditions in the aftermath of the Restoration encouraged excessive gambling, so much so that a Gambling Act was deemed necessary in 1664.
For example, Gusfield argues that the highway deaths associated with alcohol consumption can be interpreted as a problem of irresponsible drunken drivers, insufficient automobile crash-worthiness, a transportation system overly dependent on cars, poor highway design, excessive emphasis on drinking in adult social life.
The movement applied Christian ethics to social problems, especially issues of social justice such as wealth perceived as excessive, poverty, alcoholism, crime, racial tensions, slums, bad hygiene, child labor, inadequate labor unions, poor schools, and the danger of war.
It covers 12 items, namely having a discriminated, preferred adult, seeking comfort when distressed, responding to comfort when offered, social and emotional reciprocity, emotional regulation, checking back after venturing away from the care giver, reticence with unfamiliar adults, willingness to go off with relative strangers, self endangering behavior, excessive clinging, vigilance / hypercompliance and role reversal.
It can take the form of a persistent failure to initiate or respond to most social interactions in a developmentally appropriate way — known as the " inhibited " form — or can present itself as indiscriminate sociability, such as excessive familiarity with relative strangers — known as the " disinhibited form ".
It covers 12 items, namely " having a discriminated, preferred adult ", " seeking comfort when distressed ", " responding to comfort when offered ", " social and emotional reciprocity ", " emotional regulation ", " checking back after venturing away from the care giver ", " reticence with unfamiliar adults ", " willingness to go off with relative strangers ", " self-endangering behavior ", " excessive clinging ", " vigilance / hypercompliance " and " role reversal ".
Environmental triggers, such as losing a loved one, are known to contribute, as may excessive stress, or the interaction of strong social demands with a pre-existing vulnerability of self.
Excessive tallness and excessive shortness each can cause social exclusion and discrimination for both men and women ( heightism ).

2.739 seconds.