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psychotherapeutics

[ sahy-koh-ther-uh-pyoo-tiks ]

noun

(used with a singular verb)


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Other Word Forms

  • c·ٳa·t adjective
  • c·ٳa·t·· adverb
  • c·ٳa·t noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of psychotherapeutics1

First recorded in 1870–75; psycho- + therapeutics
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Now, in “Fires in the Dark,” her emphasis is on “psychotherapeutics,” which the English psychiatrist W.H.

From

Many neurologists, responding to the demand for confessional healing, gave up on anatomy and adopted psychotherapeutics.

From

Gary and Pam Shupe from Waldorf, Maryland, had driven up to shop and were staring at a row of television cameras, in front of an adjacent strip mall that advertised “psychotherapeutics services”.

From

The exact diagnosis of the various conditions from which each patient is suffering is of itself a precious factor in psychotherapeutics.

From

She began to teach her system of psychotherapeutics in 1866, and founded the first Christian Science Church in Boston in 1879.

From

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psychotechnologypsychotherapy