obsession
noun /əbˈseʃn/
/əbˈseʃn/
- Her fear of flying is bordering on obsession.
- obsession with somebody/something There's a national obsession with celebrity in England.
- The media's obsession with the young prince continues.
Extra Examples- I don't understand television's current obsession with cookery programmes.
- He was in the grip of an obsession and would not listen to reason.
- She has an unhealthy obsession with her diet.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- dangerous
- unhealthy
- current
- …
- become
- have
- obsession with
- Fitness has become an obsession with him.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- dangerous
- unhealthy
- current
- …
- become
- have
- obsession with
Word Originearly 16th cent. (in the sense ‘siege’): from Latin obsessio(n-), from the verb obsidere, from ob- ‘opposite’ + sedere ‘sit’.