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manic-depressive
[ man-ik-di-pres-iv ]
noun
- a person with this disorder.
manic-depressive
adjective
- denoting a mental disorder characterized either by an alternation between extreme euphoria and deep depression (bipolar manic-depressive disorder or syndrome) or by depression on its own or (rarely) by elation on its own (unipolar disorder)
noun
- a person afflicted with this disorder Compare cyclothymia
Word History and Origins
Origin of manic-depressive1
Example Sentences
At the top of the list of “characteristics targeted for elimination from the human population” from the late 19th century up through at least the 1950s were “manic-depressive psychosis” and “bipolar disorder.”
I know only that my mother, while still in fourth grade, watched Tomoyo go through a manic-depressive episode.
Violaine was 10 at the time of that crash; her mother, subsequently hospitalized and diagnosed as manic-depressive, was 42.
Characterized by extreme shifts in mood, “manic-depressive illness” was officially recognized by the American Psychiatric Association in 1952.
Iris, stately in her silk trousers and Nehru jacket, introducing herself in the group meetings as “a manic-depressive of 27 years’ standing.”
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