释义 |
paranoia /ˌparəˈnɔɪə /noun [mass noun]1A mental condition characterized by delusions of persecution, unwarranted jealousy, or exaggerated self-importance, typically worked into an organized system. It may be an aspect of chronic personality disorder, of drug abuse, or of a serious condition such as schizophrenia in which the person loses touch with reality.He spent some time in America and there he began to show signs of paranoia and other aspects of mental disturbance....- Twenty years of turmoil followed; five breakdowns including episodes of paranoia and delusions.
- Mr Crosland said Day's use of amphetamines had caused delusions and paranoia.
Synonyms persecution complex, delusions, obsession, megalomania, monomania; psychosis 1.1Unjustified suspicion and mistrust of other people: mild paranoia afflicts all prime ministers...- Setting aside suspicion and paranoia, surely highways officials must have a plan for the future of this area.
- On the space station that orbits Solaris, paranoia has evolved into a degree of mistrust, bordering on terror.
- The atmosphere of universal suspicion and vigilance of the Terror years was not irrational paranoia.
Derivativesparanoiac /ˌparəˈnɔɪɪk / /ˌparəˈnɔɪak / adjective & noun ...- Terrible paranoiac fear gripped me, and behind every tree I suspected maleficent laughter being muffled.
- One of the most notorious paranoiacs was Nero, who in AD 59 engineered the murder of his mother Agrippina because she objected to his relationship with his mistress Poppaea.
- Conspiracy paranoiacs will of course insist that the Agency is leaking the bad news as part of a subtle plot to throw us all off the scent of their shocking capabilities.
paranoiacally /ˌparəˈnɔɪɪk(ə)li / /ˌparəˈnɔɪak(ə)li / adverb ...- [It is a] standard Yorkshire greeting that is not meant to make you paranoiacally wonder if you suddenly started looking very ill.
- They can count his contradictions: he bragged, lied, cheated, played, was a bigamist, betrayed every one of his four wives, believed in the sanctity of marriage, was paranoiacally suspicious of his friends.
paranoic /ˌparəˈnɔɪɪk/ adjective ...- They have never talked about empire, never asked for anything which was not theirs and despite the sabre rattling and bombast of the USA have never been drawn into any counterthreats or paranoic arms races.
- Purged of the pathology of paranoic war-mongering and financial scare tactics, in a realm where the world is as we have created it, the world online may prove to be an opening to Utopia whose space we ought eagerly to explore.
- The paranoic vision of a world turned in on itself where all humanity has been drained and replaced with shambling, cannibalistic creatures that never stop hunting you freaks me out.
paranoically /ˌparəˈnɔɪɪk(ə)li/ adverb ...- What's more, his vigilance was becoming claustrophobically possessive and paranoically jealous: he would ring her several times a day to check up on her.
- By then, Philip was already peering through the blinds of the window with a single eye, paranoically watching the slick looking kid leaning against the structure.
- She held her eyes intently, paranoically, seeming to bore through the middle of my forehead.
OriginEarly 19th century: modern Latin, from Greek, from paranoos 'distracted', from para 'irregular' + noos 'mind'. Rhymesannoyer, Boyer, destroyer, employer, enjoyer, Goya, hoya, lawyer, Nagoya, sequoia, soya |