Similar words: depression, suppression, expression, compression, oppression, impression, repress, aggression. Meaning: [rɪ'preʃn] n. 1. a state of forcible subjugation 2. (psychiatry) the classical defense mechanism that protects you from impulses or ideas that would cause anxiety by preventing them from becoming conscious 3. the act of repressing; control by holding down.
Random good picture Not show
(91) The latest wave of repression began after Ali Akbar SaidiSirjani died in detention under mysterious circumstances in the end of 1994.
(92) The philosophy of Americanism was being redefined. Political repression and racial discrimination were at a high point.
(93) The government responded to such pressure not with concessions or negotiations but with outright repression.
(94) A vindictive, cruel policy of repression also maimed the economy.
(95) The pendulum swung back and the feminine principle experienced five centuries of heavy repression.
(96) Brutal repression broke the strike,[http://sentencedict.com/repression.html] and mobilization for the war initially subdued the labour movement.
(97) Corruption, economic mismanagement, repression and instability will proliferate.
(98) Consequently he threw Carrie into repression, which was irritating.
(99) Is (31) this elision the same thing as repression?
(100) Beijing's response to such tensions has long been repression.
(101) Not only is democratization out, but repression hardened.
(102) The main theme is the repression of cattle stealing.
(103) Enzyme repression was discovered by Jacques Monod in 1953.
(104) ' Repression is the only lasting philosophy.
(105) The new order also oversaw effective repression of opponents.
(106) As for political repression, few young Chinese experience it.
(107) This paper discusses the mechanism of cellobiose in fungal cellulase induction a nd repression, and its inhibition of cellulases hydrolytic activity.
(108) Russia's brutal repression and lawlessness have pushed people towards Islamic fundamentalism.
(109) That seems unlikely, given the junta's record of unmitigated repression.
(110) McGee, who spoke to U.S. reporters in a conference call, is urging Southern African countries to take a stronger stand against political repression there.
(111) This thesis is to analyze Eustacia s tragedy in the light of Feminist Criticism and reveals that it is the traditional patriarchalism caused the repression and bondage suffered by women.
(112) For its infectiousness as well as the immune repression and intercurrent brought to pigs, PRRSV caused huge economic loss to pig's feeding industry.
(113) Somewhere between this extreme repression of the monk and the license of the sensualist lies the truth.
(114) Lei - ring and general wear - resistant nitrile rubber by dipping the fabric from repression.
(115) Brazilian capitalism, at that time, was not only a matter of low salaries, insalubrious working conditions and repression of the union movement.
(116) Batista was keeping himself in power only by a mounting use of repression, corruption and violence.
(117) His pervasive, and often cruel and petty, repression, in the words of one of the country's most famous samizdat writers of the Ben Ali years, Om Zied, "put a policeman in everyone's head".
(118) The biosynthesis of spiramycin (SPM) by streptomyces spiramyceticus sp. 799 was regulated by carbon and nitrogen catabolite repression as well as end products feedback repression.
(119) The repression of your true feelings is harmful to your health.
(120) This new and elemental environment seemed to call for a savage repression.
More similar words: depression, suppression, expression, compression, oppression, impression, repress, aggression, digression, representation, congressional, transgression, misrepresentation, proportional representation, represent, depressed, representative, pressing, session, cession, repercussion, prepossessing, impressive, expressive, recession, secession, confession, concession, profession, succession.