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"pathologically" Definitions
  1. in a way that is not reasonable or sensible; in a way that is impossible to control
  2. in a way that is caused by, or connected with, disease or illness
  3. (specialist) in a way that is connected with pathology
"pathologically" Antonyms

135 Sentences With "pathologically"

How to use pathologically in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "pathologically" and check conjugation/comparative form for "pathologically". Mastering all the usages of "pathologically" from sentence examples published by news publications.

He's proven himself pathologically incapable of doing that time and again.
I remember being pathologically incapable of turning down work when I freelanced.
Children's Books I come from a people pathologically afraid of being lost.
She was already phobic, pathologically afraid of heights and travel—and abandonment.
British governments have often exhibited xenophobia but rarely as pathologically as this.
Trump's white supremacy can't be pedagogically altered because it is pathologically rooted.
Under the bizarre circumstances at the hotel, the narrator appears almost pathologically sane.
The problem was Trump's personality, which he considered pathologically impulsive and self-centered.
He seems pathologically incapable of accepting responsibility or admitting that he is wrong.
"You don't have to take everything so personally," says her pathologically normal brother Sandy.
Drake, who pathologically releases music, has a new song for your hot summer nights.
And yet, that is an idea that most Americans are pathologically incapable of processing.
What's new is that an increasing number of them are already working remotely … pathologically.
In stark contrast to his showy side, he is pathologically secretive about his taxes.
First, Republicans are near-pathologically unwilling to level with voters about a range of issues.
He is an extreme narcissist, pathologically dishonest, shameless, a man who delights in flouting norms.
Maybe not pathologically, because it doesn't seem that he believes his own lies, but definitely compulsively.
In part, of course, that is soccer, and sports generally: unforgiving, relentless, pathologically averse to sentimentality.
Erin was almost pathologically extroverted and didn't like to go more than 48 hours without checking in.
It's not hard to see how he could become almost pathologically self-regarding and unconcerned with others.
My pathologically happy manager urged all of us to simply drink more espresso anytime our smiles dipped.
The very late move towards diversity is already a seismic shift for a pathologically beige cultural institution.
Turtle is a staunchly American type, perhaps the American type — tough, taciturn and almost pathologically self-sufficient.
It takes the Scottish desire for sovereignty for granted (also: the English are greedy and pathologically sadistic).
Born to a frustrated, at times pathologically abusive and abused mother, Valerie, Ryan too became frustrated and violent.
Some people lie pathologically, ignoring or disregarding reality; others lie to themselves, creating false but comforting self-images.
They are also innately, pathologically disturbed, cocooned in fantasies that filter and warp the reality of coarse daily life.
Trump is near-pathologically unwilling to admit mistake or defeat, instead insisting on blaming others whenever anything goes wrong.
The point of calling public schools "government schools" is to conjure the specter of pathologically inefficient, power-mad bureaucrats.
But I'm pathologically unable to give these people an iota of satisfaction, of letting them know it got to me.
Charli creates almost pathologically, and consistently finds herself sitting on too much genuinely envelope-pushing material to keep it hidden.
Word of the Day : pathologically excessive (and often incoherent) talking _________ The word logorrhea has appeared in one article on NYTimes.
But it has come alongside something even more pathologically strange: Trump publicly denying Sessions had ever been loyal to him.
Media representations of black people often rely on stereotypes that paint black people as pathologically flawed: criminal, violent, neglectful, and subhuman.
We just rarely hear about it, because the audiophiles that write about audio gear are almost pathologically opposed to blind testing.
Yet for those of us too young to be pathologically attached to physical formats, the digital download didn't devalue music necessarily.
That demographic includes nervous parents, people who describe themselves as "politically incorrect," the pathologically sarcastic, accidental racists — in a word, everybody.
Perhaps not surprisingly, there is quite substantial evidence that this rhythm is pathologically altered or is impaired in patients with depression.
The incursion of technology into every aspect of consumption has meant that only the indolent or pathologically tolerant wait for things.
Rally Trump is the role the President began refining as a pathologically competitive boy playing soldier at his military high school.
This is the beginning of Gold's transformation of Laura — a character usually played as pathologically fragile — from symbol into human being.
Conservationists like Koenig have a way of remaining pathologically optimistic, perhaps as a psychological bulwark against the daily onslaught of upsetting news.
Psychedelics seem to have the potential through this effect on the brain to dissolve or disintegrate pathologically entrenched patterns of brain activity.
In the caption, Willis writes that she's part of the "codependent daughters club," but their relationship doesn't seem so pathologically one-sided.
"Turtle is a staunchly American type, perhaps the American type — tough, taciturn and almost pathologically self-sufficient," our critic Parul Sehgal writes.
He apologized for having damned her to a "life of mediocrity" should she choose Bryan Abasolo and his pathologically eager-to-marry promises.
She had the blond locks and cornflower-blue eyes of all the Mitfords, but she was big-boned and clumsy and pathologically naïve.
Flake sees Trump as an Orwellian figure, a pathologically untruthful authoritarian who is undoing everything that America, and especially conservative America, stands for.
"Pathologically, when someone is addicted, their substance will give them a shot of dopamine, a reward chemical produced by the brain," she said.
"I hated her life but thought I should have it," he admits, in a moment of shocking candor from a pathologically dishonest man.
To reassure me that I wasn't pathologically self-destructing, my boyfriend took me on a night out to celebrate my last day at work.
This big reader with the pathologically light-sensitive eyes will never write a senior thesis—college rap he ain't, which is a positive, nuhmean?
And this just a list of physical violence that has befallen the pathologically unlucky Grey, the tally of mental anguish goes on and on.
She waited half her life to punish the father who had deserted her mother and then placed his daughters under a pathologically cruel governess.
"Pathologically promiscuous" (his own description), Sharp continued to romance his two wives, one current and one former, along with one of Bainbridge's Liverpool girlfriends.
Nor do we want a cadre of judges, prosecutors and legislators who are pathologically dissociated from society, from other human beings, and from themselves.
I'm pathologically crafts-averse, to the point where I almost got held back in second grade because I wouldn't touch Cray-Pas with my hands.
We are pathologically unable to say what needs to be said: that nostalgia, exceptionalism and a xenophobic failure of the collective imagination have undone us.
She's a hard case, inarticulate and pathologically defensive, and the school is torture for her (in the ways reform schools typically are in cautionary dramas).
But she was pathologically terrified of mice, who were fewer in number but larger and harder to kill and bolder the longer we lived there.
My first job had me miscast as a bubbly shopgirl; I was pathologically shy, and thus tended to replace human speech with excessive head gestures.
And then Deadmau5 wades in uninvited, leading us to believe at this point that he is pathologically attracted to petty conflict like a fly to shit.
I'm biased — one of the arrestees is a close friend — but it seems hard to interpret CMP's response as anything other than pathologically dumb and counterproductive.
"The main clue to Dalí, I think, is that he was pathologically timid deep down and constructed his exhibitionistic persona as a protective device," he said.
Yes, he lacked the fierceness and conviction of a Dreiser or a Lewis; his talent was descriptive rather than penetrating; and he was almost pathologically nonconfrontational.
And recent events show that this is a president who is as unpredictable to rogue states as he is to a pathologically hostile press at home.
We were very close by the time we got there to film and got so much closer, pathologically closer over the course of the summer in fact.
The disease is pathologically marked by a buildup of abnormal tau protein in the brain that can disable neuropathways and lead to a variety of clinical symptoms.
An accurate way to describe him to a layperson would be as a shoddy facsimile of Trump: mean-spirited, racist, ill-informed, pathologically dishonest, and generally clownlike.
This brisk novel by an eminent Martinican writer tells the story of an elderly slave, his master, and a "pathologically alive" mastiff that dispenses near-mythical brutality.
For a country that is so "pathologically forward-looking" (take the promise of the American dream), it's fascinating how much is predicated on the past, Abumrad said.
It seems, in these troubled months after the Harvey Weinstein revelations, not pathologically frigid but, well, pretty normal for a woman not to want to be assaulted.
Many of the people he writes about seem to have grown hypersensitive to any loss of control; they pathologically fixate on absurd attempts to regulate the uncontrollable.
Love Is ... My dad used to say, "You should marry someone who's the opposite of you," which I suppose meant not pathologically anxious and not a writer.
" Fehrman calls John Adams' unpublished autobiography the first example of a president trying to write "his own legacy," in a manuscript that was "extraordinarily personal and pathologically petty.
At 36 minutes, the album is a paragon of concision; he's packed enough fury and invention to sustain a grandiose statement into a pathologically tight, controlled, restrained structure.
She tells me that she is "pathologically in love" with a man she hardly knows—a man she visited at his place of work once, to harass him.
No, the pathologically petty majority leader, Mitch McConnell, who didn't even wait for Justice Antonin Scalia's body to get cold, announced, unequivocally, that he would not hold hearings.
Barbara (Judi Dench), an aging schoolteacher, is pathologically infatuated with Sheba (Cate Blanchett), her married colleague, while Sheba is having an affair with a teenage student (Andrew Simpson).
The ambition is laudable, but Tim Miller's movie, far from seeming reckless and loose-limbed, comes across as pathologically calculated, measuring out its nastiness to the last drop.
Fadell is almost pathologically compelled to say what's on his mind, and never in the week I spent shadowing him did he say anything that smacked of self-pity.
Under pressure from her pathologically meddlesome brother-in-law, she once more cycled through her reasons: Henry lacks money, he lacks position, they're not right for each other, etc.
"As a business owner, you want to be pathologically optimistic and hope that moving forward, people with business experience making these policies will have a positive impact overall," Winkler said.
Sadly, this is only the latest instance in which President Trump and most of his team seem pathologically unable or diabolically unwilling to utter a cross word about Putin's Russia.
Indeed, Facebook appears pathologically incapable of abandoning its long-standing modus operandi of socially engineering consent from users (doubtless fed via its own self-reinforced A/B testing ad expertise).
That neurotic quality is what Kate McKinnon, on "Saturday Night Live," pours into her strange, affectionate incarnation of Clinton: wanting the job so badly that she can seem pathologically presidential.
He fell in love with a woman from Reading, Elsie Viola Kachel, pathologically shy and "(literally) from the wrong side of the tracks," and cut ties with his disapproving father.
I caught up with fake Hagar—who is, by the way, pathologically friendly—on the concourse during the third quarter after he finished shaking hands with a half dozen fans.
She sent him videos, articles and texts about "narcissist abuse," a nonmedical term that has gained popularity online to describe the pain experienced by partners of pathologically self-centered people.
There's some categories where this doesn't apply — people who are pathologically addicted, or children — but the vast majority of us either moderate our behavior or stop using the product altogether.
It's the same reason Spotify doesn't offer lengthy explanations for its "Brain Food" or "Perfect Concentration" playlists, which are self-evidently useful in a culture pathologically obsessed with individual productivity.
If he has any chance to sell himself as a candidate qualified to run the nation, he needs to stay disciplined and on message, which he is pathologically incapable of doing.
For instance, men are often celebrated for displaying overconfidence, aggressiveness and fearless risk-taking, but women who show the same traits are often seen as being a "bulldozer" or pathologically ambitious.
"It is time for a pathologically obsessive Kejriwal to go for another detoxification therapy for the body and mind," he said, apparently a reference to Mr. Kejriwal's well-publicized meditation retreats.
Yet frustratingly, five episodes in and with four more go to, we are barely any closer to knowing what turned Andrew Cunanan into a pathologically mendacious psychopath, much less a killer.
And though this sounds pathologically self-referential and narcissistic, there are many meanings to be found in the complexity with which Mr. Gordon fragments and reorders his career and private life.
Also noted in the motion is Lee's autopsy report, which shows it was "forensically and pathologically" impossible for Lee to have been buried at the time prosecutors and Wilds claim she was.
The bombshell report accused Ross, who managed a private equity firm before joining the administration, of pathologically swindling his business associates out of their share of profits and misleading investors for decades.
Growing up in Manchester, N.H., Sandler was almost pathologically well-adjusted, lacking a formative wound of the type that leads people to get up onstage and beg for the adulation of crowds.
The implication being that there is something pathologically broken about blackness that makes black people prone to self-destruction, and that attention to anything else is a minor diversion from a larger truth.
"The career politicians are more pretentious and polished when they pathologically lie, but they're ten times more dangerous than Trump," M Street of the Beltway wrote in response to a column by Nicholas Kristof.
This 1915 painting — a mid-career work in the oeuvre of an almost pathologically prolific and long-lived artist — would seem to be "about" nothing more than cruciferous vegetables and maybe color, form, paint.
Kendall says that the Moment Coach feature, which delivers short, daily exercises to reduce smartphone use, seems to be particularly effective among millennials, the generation most stereotypically associated with being pathologically attached to their phones.
Mr. Guinness played le Carré's frequent hero George Smiley: an owlish, soft-spoken, pathologically British intelligence chief whose nose for treachery is keen — developed in part, perhaps, by the experience of his wife's serial infidelity.
When a president and his closest advisers pathologically lie to the public, and Pence's article is yet another example, how can the American people (and our allies) believe anything coming out of the White House?
" The Carson campaign vociferously disputed the reports, insisting that he was too a pathologically violent teenager, leading to totally accurate headlines like, "Ben Carson Defends Himself Against Allegations That He Never Attempted to Murder a Child.
All genres, given enough ingenuity, can be adapted to this strategy, and the sole genre or subgenre that I personally am pathologically averse to would be that pertaining to the superhero, but apparently that's just me.
Of course, Mr. Gvasalia made an obligatory nod to the founder of the house, Cristóbal Balenciaga, the pathologically shy and dictatorial dressmaking genius whose works sometimes appear less like items of clothing than works of soft sculpture.
Ingrid Goes West is twisted and dark comedy — part addiction narrative, part stalker story — and yet it's set in a world that's almost pathologically cheery: the glossy, sunny, nourishing, superfood- and superlative-loving universe of Instagram celebrity.
Her style, refined in films like " Ratcatcher " (1999) and " We Need to Talk About Kevin " (2011), is unignorable; the closeups are pathologically rapt, and the focus is not just on faces but on other regions of the body.
Ingrid Goes West is a twisted and dark comedy — part addiction narrative, part stalker story — and yet it's set in a world that's almost pathologically cheery: the glossy, sunny, nourishing, superfood- and superlative-loving universe of Instagram celebrity.
Republicans have been deterred from dismantling that office for now, but their inclination to go back to the good old days of the mid-2000s, and to tolerate much more insidious corruption from Trump himself, is pathologically self-destructive.
I like to think of the region as a sprawling artists' colony, where everyone is almost pathologically productive, keeping a safe distance from one another in their secluded studios while still wanting to know what everyone is working on.
That deficit is corrected on Thursday night when CBS presents "Angel From Hell," a sitcom in which she plays Amy, a guardian angel who's essentially a well-meaning, pathologically needy stalker with a drinking problem and a tendency to overshare.
I'm all for the Ikea 'be kind to people and the planet' value and am hoping to get involved with the new recycling project starting soon at our store, but some people (sadly, myself included) are pathologically unable to build Ikea furniture.
"Even if you take all of his ill-defined political beliefs out of the picture, he's still an ignorant, intemperate, foolish, gullible, intellectually incurious, pathologically dishonest conspiracy theorist who is utterly unqualified for the job of running a country," Collins told Gizmodo.
He gives no thought to anything he says, which is how he ended up encouraging violence against Hillary Clinton in the first place; and he's pathologically incapable of admitting error, which is why he'll let the incitement stand rather than correct the impression.
"It's a common misperception that these men go for weak women; it's quite the opposite — these pathologically self-centered guys want a strong woman who has a lot to give," writesHuff Post contributorand founder and CEO of Date Like a Grownup, Bobbi Palmer.
Peter and the Farm is a film about extinction, and as Peter watches his way of life fall out of favor—both in America, and in his own pathologically complex relationship with his land—it feels as if he himself is vanishing, too.
The first half is a grim urban nocturne introducing Mr. Ryan as Jim Wilson, a big city police detective pathologically prone to excessive force; then, abruptly moving from the dark city to an alpine wilderness, the movie enters the realm of allegory.
Besides, hearing from witnesses wouldn't erase Republican senators' awful behavior to this point in the trial: all the ugly gloating from the likes of Lindsey Graham that Adam Schiff's undeniable eloquence was for naught; Marsha Blackburn's pathologically exuberant attacks on the integrity of Lt. Col.
By buying their way into the churches, private schools, and public radio antennae of millions of Americans, by decimating public institutions and any semblance of media neutrality, these wealthy conservatives had prepared millions of fundamentalists to support a habitually adulterous, pathologically dishonest reality television personality.
"Their behavior is almost always pathologically narcissistic due to their indifference to the fear or anxiety they are inducing in the target of their affection," explains Reid Meloy, a forensic psychologist and clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine.
It was during these prodigal years, after a more conventional second novel was greeted with shrugs, that Ellis wrote the New York noir "American Psycho," about a soullessly materialistic 26-year-old financier who suffers a breakdown while pathologically committing gruesome acts of rape and murder.
That language is uncalled for and wholly gratuitous, especially in connection with an election featuring a fresh-faced and extremely conservative 33-year-old attorney who seems almost pathologically concerned with fiscal discipline, and if anyone was offended by that language it would certainly be regrettable to me.
The contemporary imagination suffers from the modern world's neurotic desire to divide all knowledge and mental activity into distinct disciplines, and the notion that the president can't be crazy just because he isn't clinically, pathologically disordered seems to me to be a deliberately over-narrow parsing of possible truths.
Like Camille, Ms. Adams's character in "The Woman in the Window," a Hitchcockian psychological thriller that debuted at No. 1 on the New York Times best-seller list this year, is another artifact of the "Moody and Introspective" era — she'll play a mentally unstable and pathologically nosy recluse.
"I can say, I refuse to wear glasses, I am pathologically opposed to glasses, so I'm going to have to get an aide, I'm going to have to have someone read to me and I can make people make the print large and I'm going to need a chauffeur," she said.
But because The Handmaid's Tale is pathologically afraid of giving June consequences, she just happens to do it in a place where it will be difficult to trace his murder to her, and she just happens to be discovered by a Martha who is loyal to her and will cover up everything.
It's hard to imagine that anyone except the most incessantly hovering, pathologically neurotic and culturally oblivious helicopter parent hasn't clued in to the near-constant barrage of advice not to treat children like delicate butterflies who must be shielded from all forms of predation (nonorganic food, unsupervised play, mediocre grades, the feeling of sadness).
The source of Amy's perfectionism quickly becomes clear, as Ruth challenges Amy's decision to have a low-key Christmas at home every way she can, while also remaining pathologically unable to acknowledge Jesse as Amy's boyfriend (she asks him — loudly, as if he can't understand English — to take her bags) or even remember his name.
It is a future in which my loved ones and all of those who reared and mentored me will be recognized as first-class citizens deserving of the very best America has to offer, not as restive black and brown folk pathologically inclined to violence who should be pacified with low-paying jobs or beaten into docility by more "law and order" policing.
That a pathologically careless demagogue who marshalled racial hatred, bragged about sexual assault, and openly disdained the country he sought to lead could be rewarded with the stewardship of the free world registered as a stupid and senselessly cruel act of brutality; a warning shot that there are no marginalized groups in America who have made gains that can not still be destroyed.
What sets this album above previous ones isn't Anohni's voice per se, which remains the model of a pathologically strained Brit-soul school that tackier artists like Sam Smith have since taken to the pop charts, or her political lyrics, which have gotten more alert and continue to dwell on rising tides and dying animals with more sentimentality than an ecologist might prefer, but rather the new experimental electronic template.
Fair, because, look, if one week you were watching a show about a couple who might have broken up at a German-culture festival, and then the next week they're gone and you're watching a road comedy about an exasperated rapper and his pathologically distractible barber, and the episode after that is a mini horror film built around a different character trapped in the mansion of a kooky human mannequin, the changeups might feel destabilizing.

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