cathartical / kəˈθɑr tɪk /

戏剧性的疗法阴性戏剧性

cathartical2 个定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. of or relating to catharsis.
  2. Also ca·thar·ti·cal. evacuating the bowels; purgative.
n. 名词 noun
  1. a purgative.

cathartical 近义词

cathartical

等同于 cathartic

cathartical 的近义词 3
cathartical

等同于 evacuative

更多cathartical例句

  1. They produce a magnificent chemistry that not only gives the audience full understanding of the love they exude for each other, but also a cathartic desire to be one of them.
  2. It’s true that high-intensity workouts can give you cathartic release through a rush of positive emotions and clarity.
  3. It’ll be really cathartic to get to play certain songs again.
  4. Perhaps disgust is cathartic to enjoy when there’s no real threat of contamination, just like it’s cathartic to feel the rush of heart-pounding thrillers or tragedies.
  5. I also appreciated that Cassie’s death paid off one of the ideas that Promising Young Woman laid out early on, which is that her revenge was not going to be cathartic and sexy.
  6. There was something cathartic about deleting this 2,500-word monster of a farewell, and resolving to live.
  7. Someone once asked me, did I find writing personally cathartic.
  8. The acknowledgment of these crimes, which came as part of an amnesty for them, was a cathartic moment for El Salvador.
  9. It was a cathartic moment for the brand, though far from a guarantee to help restore it to its glory days.
  10. In that way that was cathartic too, to sort of stitch up all those pieces and see how that is.
  11. The latter is an active emeto-cathartic, and is abundant on swampy grounds throughout the Southern States.
  12. Sometimes, a gentle cathartic may be needful; but it is best first to try fasting.
  13. Cathartic medicine should not be administered the first, the third, or any other day after confinement, unless it is needed.
  14. The cathartic waters are the most numerous and the most extensively used.
  15. Two or three glasses in the morning is the dose as a cathartic.