reduction from a volatile or fluid to a stable or solid form.
the process of converting atmospheric nitrogen into a useful compound, as a nitrate fertilizer.
Photography. the process of rendering an image permanent by removal of light-sensitive silver halides.
Psychoanalysis. a partial arrest of emotional and instinctual development at an early point in life, due to a severe traumatic experience or an overwhelming gratification.
a preoccupation with one subject, issue, etc.; obsession: All her life she had a fixation on stories of violent death.
Origin of fixation
1350–1400; Middle English fixacion<Medieval Latin fixātiōn- (stem of fixātiō) a reduction to a fixed state. See fix, -ation
OTHER WORDS FROM fixation
non·fix·a·tion,noun
Words nearby fixation
Five Towns, five W's, Five-Year Plan, fix, fixate, fixation, fixation nystagmus, fixation point, fixative, fixator, fixator muscle
The condition of being stabilized, firmly attached, or set.
The act or process of stabilizing or attaching something, especially a body part by surgery.
The rapid killing and preservation of tissue elements to retain as nearly as possible the same characteristics they had in the living body.
The conversion of a gas into solid or liquid form by chemical reactions.
In psychoanalytic theory, a strong emotional attachment to a person or thing, especially an attachment formed in childhood or infancy and manifested in disturbed behavior that persists throughout life.
The coordinated positioning and focusing of both eyes on an object.