psychochemical love

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun A psychoactive drug or substance.
  • adjective Of or relating to psychochemicals.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Incapacitants (psychochemical agents) disrupt a victim's mental and physical capabilities.

    FM 100-61 Chptr 14 NBC and Smoke Support United States Army 1998

  • Incapacitants (psychochemical agents) disrupt a victim's mental and physical capabilities.

    FM 100-61 Chptr 14 NBC and Smoke Support United States Army 1998

  • It wasn't important; it would simply have been useful to know what kind of change I was dealing with: psychochemical or hypnotic.

    Quiller Bamboo Hall, Adam 1991

  • Incoming messages told him that Voranski would not be replaced until the next visit of the Sovetsky Ivanov, that the special psychochemical expert, Koronski, was available to arrive from Bangkok at twelve hours 'notice, and that he, Suslev, was to assume direction of Sevrin and liaise with Arthur directly.

    Noble House Clavell, James 1981

  • Incoming messages told him that Voranski would not be replaced until the next visit of the Sovetsky Ivanov, that the special psychochemical expert, Koronski, was available to arrive from Bangkok at twelve hours 'notice, and that he, Suslev, was to assume direction of Sevrin and liaise with Arthur directly.

    Noble House Clavell, James 1981

  • For if the right sort of psychochemical cocktail is automatically triggered whenever anyone one knows is present or recollected, then we can combine absolute, unconditional and uninhibited love for each other with a celebration of the diversity of genes, physiques and cultures.

    The Seminal :: Independent Media And Politics 2009

  • The most interesting section of the report details proposed experiments with psychochemical agents.

    unknown title 2009

  • The psychochemical agent section discusses the '… use of an agent causing temporary mental and / or motor incapacitation of troops or civilian populations …' and concludes that, 'it is desirable, but not essential, that the agents have no permanent effects.'

    unknown title 2009

  • And I think there’s something to Lasky’s idea that Anderson shifts in Tenenbaums from a model of autonomous, tragedy-laced genius towards a comparatively more hopeless one of psychological and psychochemical dysfunction:

    Genius in the Works of Wes Anderson « Gerry Canavan 2008

  • 26 These are used in the setting component or corpuscle of intelli - ness of the Names and to maintain are trapped within the River of prayer where third eye concen - gence within the grid circulatory a certain vibratory control over the of Consciousness beneath the tration is necessary u p o n a given system that i s attached to your psychochemical process.

    Recently Uploaded Slideshows czaragon 2009

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