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preconscious
[pree-kon-shuhs]
adjective
Psychoanalysis.absent from but capable of being readily brought into consciousness.
occurring prior to the development of consciousness.
noun
the preconscious portion of the mind; foreconscious.
preconscious
/ ːˈɒʃə /
adjective
psychol prior to the development of consciousness
noun
psychoanal mental contents or activity not immediately in consciousness but readily brought there
Other 51Թ Forms
- preconsciously adverb
- ˈDzԲdzܲԱ noun
- ˈDzԲdzܲ adverb
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of preconscious1
Example Sentences
The study's author, anthropologist Michael Winkelman of Arizona State, concluded that drumming "produces pleasurable experiences, enhanced awareness of preconscious dynamics, release of emotional trauma, and reintegration of self."
It’s not my favorite of his books, perhaps because he’s working to conjure his father’s voice, rather than taking dictation from his preconscious as in the other, subtler books.
In play, we express in metaphors and symbols what the unconscious or preconscious knows and wants us to see at a conscious level.
Approaching eighty, Howe, in “Love and I,”is now revisiting the earliest formative impressions of preconscious childhood, when “everything seemed like something else.”
It reflects the largely preconscious valuations, priorities and internalised beliefs of the people who devised Google Home.
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