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subconscious - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • become: At the astral death in heaven, the ego is forced to become subconscious.
  • access: Accessing the subconscious He cites, for example, a non-autistic student whose calculating skills rival those of the best mathematical savants.
  • have: Physical, visual and auditory stimuli can have powerful subconscious learning effects.
  • allow: With hypnosis we relax, focus and close down the conscious mind allowing the subconscious to open.
  • give: Abreaction gives the subconscious mind the opportunity to release the buried anxiety.
  • make: What is the point of making the old ego subconscious at the moment of rebirth?

Preposition: at

  • work: Could also be my subconscious at work... yikes!

Converse of subject

  • guide: We're pushed or guided by the subconscious, and unaware of it.

Adjective modifier

  • collective: Once established in the collective subconscious of policy makers, however, these ideas can be amazingly hard to dislodge.
  • human: Also, however honest the researchers, there is enormous scope for the human subconscious to intrude in order to optimize the results.
  • own: The call had come from her own creative subconscious.
  • conscious: This picture sees the brain in terms of conscious plus subconscious.
  • station's: How do we know the whole thing is not a product of the station's subconscious?

Modifies a noun

  • mind: Using the subconscious mind is the fastest way to create calm.
  • personality: The minute you got near that machine and opened the receiver, waves from your subconscious personality flowed into it.
  • determinism: When anxiety becomes attached to the memory of an event it causes the problem of subconscious determinism.
  • motivation: The problem that faces almost everyone is learning to change subconscious motivation.
  • hatred: My self-analysis had made me aware of my intense level of subconscious hatred toward her.
  • desire: About all men having a subconscious desire to kill their fathers.

Possessives

  • client: These tangible metaphors become anchors or triggers, impressed upon the client's subconscious.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.