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neu·rot·ic
nu̇-ˈrä-tik
nyu̇-
: of, relating to, constituting, or affected with neurosis (see neurosis)
1
: one affected with a neurosis (see neurosis)
2
: an emotionally unstable individual
Examples of neurotic in a Sentence
Adjective
This most fastidious of pianists sounds anything but neurotic when he plays Mozart.
—Richard Coles, Times Literary Supplement, 15 Nov. 2002
Maybe it's because novelists don't talk much about each other. Maybe this is because novelists secrete a certain BO which only other novelists detect, like certain buzzards who emit a repellent pheromone detectable only by other buzzards, which is to say that only a novelist can know how neurotic, devious, underhanded a novelist can be.
—Walker Percy, "An Interview With Zoltán Abádi-Nagy," 1987,
in Signposts in a Strange Land, 1991
In our own time, the most perfect examples of such biography … are the matchless case-histories of Freud. Freud here shows, with absolute clarity, that the on-going nature of neurotic illness and its treatment cannot be displayed except by biography.
—Oliver Sacks, Awakenings, (1973) 1990
The psychiatrist diagnosed the patient as neurotic.
My neurotic mother scolded me for staying out 10 minutes past curfew.
He is neurotic about his job.
Noun
More than any rebirth, one senses in the England of 1911 a civilization's unconscious death wish, vividly present in the author's glimpses of the poet Rupert Brooke, that squeaky-clean neurotic, a casualty waiting to happen.
—Thomas Mallon, New York Times Book Review, 27 May 2007
As a claustrophobe—perhaps the only kind of neurotic out of place in New York—I find nothing in the city more terrifying than a stalled subway car.
—John Tierney, New York Times Magazine, 19 Mar. 1995
You are too much something for a tubercular neurotic who can only be jealous and mean and perverse.
—F. Scott Fitzgerald, letter, 2 Dec. 1939
He was diagnosed as a neurotic.
He is a neurotic about keeping his clothes neat.
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Adjective
Here are some presents for those delightfully neurotic people in your life, the ones who keep their kitchens as organized as the pros in restaurants.
—Emily Johnson, Bon Appétit, 5 Dec. 2024
Due to childhood lead poisoning, the research suggests that Americans, overall, are less conscientious and more neurotic.
—Lauren Leffer, Popular Science, 4 Dec. 2024
Noun
David feels like a kinder, gentler version of the neurotic, sometimes anxious characters he’s played in everything from The Social Network to the Zombieland movies.
—David Fear, Rolling Stone, 5 Nov. 2024
For example, a partner might innocently forget to take out the trash, but a neurotic spouse may view this as evidence of carelessness or lack of respect, leading to an overblown argument.
—Mark Travers, Forbes, 19 Oct. 2024
See all Example Sentences for neurotic
Word History
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Cite this Entry
“Neurotic.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/neurotic. Accessed 17 Dec. 2024.
Kids Definition
neurotic
1 of 2 adjective
neu·rot·ic
n(y)u̇-ˈrät-ik
: of, relating to, being, or affected with neurosis
neurotic
2 of 2 noun1
: a person affected with a neurosis
2
: an emotionally unstable person
Medical Definition
neurotic
1 of 2 adjective
neu·rot·ic
n(y)u̇-ˈrät-ik
1
2
: affected with, relating to, or characterized by neurosis
a neurotic person
neurotic
2 of 2 noun1
: one affected with a neurosis
2
: an emotionally unstable individual
More from Merriam-Webster on neurotic
Thesaurus: All synonyms and antonyms for neurotic
Nglish: Translation of neurotic for Spanish Speakers
Britannica English: Translation of neurotic for Arabic Speakers
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