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subcurrent
[suhb-kur-uhnt, -kuhr-]
noun
a not clearly revealed or formulated direction of thought, intention, action, etc., underlying what is manifested.
His words, though ostensibly friendly, betrayed a subcurrent of hostility.
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Origin of subcurrent1
Example Sentences
A reliable subcurrent in American studentsā conversions away from the ardent Zionism of their youth is firsthand confrontation with reality in the West Bank.
One subcurrent at Sturgis, as I would soon discover, is rating who is and is not a real biker: trailers, renters, three-wheeling ātrikers,ā members of outlaw gangs, women.
One oddity that canāt be ignored in this āSopranosā resurgence is that, somewhat atypically for a TV fandom, there is an openly left-wing subcurrent within it ā less āI feel so seen by thisā lefty than āintricate knowledge of different factions within the Philadelphia D.S.A.ā lefty.
But the pairās personae, which place them as outsiders among insiders and as at once hipsters and squares, are also quintessentially New York Jewish, and Koenigās consciousness of that status is a subcurrent on Father of the Bride.
Griffithās death brought a roiling racial subcurrent to the surface: he was fatally struck by a car as he fled onto a highway to escape a mob of whites who were chasing him.
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