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Depression

[ US /dɪˈpɹɛʃən/ ]
[ UK /dɪpɹˈɛʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a period during the 1930s when there was a worldwide economic depression and mass unemployment

How To Use Depression In A Sentence

  • When I looked at the chart a second time, I saw that there was a lot Michael had left out of his personal history; specifically, IVDU—intravenous drug use—dating back ten years, and a major depression that had led to a psychiatric hospitalization and ECT, electroconvulsive therapy. After the Diagnosis
  • Postpartum depression, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder , and low IQs are all linked to low DHA levels.
  • The pictures show squares within squares - the water-holding depressions that in ancient times made the gardens fruitful.
  • The results were disastrous, plunging the country into deep depression, with high unemployment, sharply falling living standards and serious political unrest.
  • It is pertinent to destigmatize depression, so those suffering from it could seek medical help.
  • This is the northernmost and wettest of the central Asian depressions, remnants of a Tertiary era inland sea, with relict glaciers, glacier lakes and a wide variety of rock types, the result of a long series of successive eras of deposition and orogeny. Uvs Nuur Basin, Russian Federation, Republic of Tuva and Mongolia
  • The term Great Depression was a perfect fit in the 1930s; nobody has coined a phrase to properly describe our current plight. Dispatch.com: RSS
  • The story of the guilt-ridden woman who knows she can never be a good enough mother is beautifully judged in its mixture of comedy and depression.
  • The country is experiencing a severe economic depression.
  • Profound stupor associated with depression also responds to IV sodium amobarbital, thus permitting conversation between the patient and examiner, which often reveals depressive symptoms. The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry
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