Definition of Rearousal

1. arousal [n -S] - See also: arousal

Lexicographical Neighbors of Rearousal

rearm
rearmament
rearmaments
rearmed
rearmice
rearming
rearmouse
rearmouses
rearms
rearomatization
rearomatize
rearomatizes
rearomatizing
rearose
rearousal (current term)
rearousals
rearouse
rearoused
rearouses
rearousing
rearrange
rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic
rearrangeable
rearranged
rearrangement
rearrangement reaction
rearrangement reactions
rearrangements
rearranger

Literary usage of Rearousal

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Essentials of Psychology by Walter Bowers Pillsbury (1920)
"Our present formulation is that memory consists in the rearousal of the cortical ... The idea comes only on the rearousal of structures as a result of the ..."

2. The Essentials of Psychology by Walter Bowers Pillsbury (1920)
"Our present formulation is that memory consists in the rearousal of the ... ~ihe idea comes Q only on the rearousal-'of structures as a result of the ..."

3. The Fundamentals of Psychology by Walter Bowers Pillsbury (1916)
"... or the partial openness of synapses which permits an impression to pass from one to the other of the connected elements; recall is the rearousal of the ..."

4. A Text-book of psychology by Edward Bradford Titchener (1910)
"emergence of the single element, strong and clear, would directly correspond ; there would be no rearousal of the mental double. ..."

5. The Psychology of Reasoning by Walter Bowers Pillsbury (1910)
"... the entrance to consciousness of purely unbiased and totally new facts; rather is it an occasion for the rearousal of earlier developed generalizations, ..."

6. The Limits of Socialism by Oswald Fred Boucke (1920)
"... or the partial openness of synapses which permits an impression to pass from one to the other of the connected elements: recall is the rearousal of the ..."

7. The Physiology of Faith and Fear: Or, The Mind in Health and Disease by William Samuel Sadler (1912)
"Associative memory may be not only the basis for worry, but it may abo be an explanation of the rearousal of passions, <ach as anger, by the recall of ..."

8. The Physiology of Faith and Fear: Or, The Mind in Health and Disease by William Samuel Sadler (1912)
"Associative memory may be not only the basis for worry, but it may also be an explanation of the rearousal of passions, such as anger, by the recall of ..."

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