Possible misspelling? More dictionaries have definitions for
sarcode,
strode
-- could that be what you meant?
such a richness of decorative effect
That was the beginning of the wattle fences, the cobble pave, the brown roof beams, the cunningly wrought fabrics that gave to his pictures such a richness of decorative effect. — from The Troll Garden, and Selected Stories by Willa Cather
sayings and rules of discipline established
We cannot doubt that the synod at the Açokarama had revised the collection of sayings and rules of discipline established by the first two councils in order to excise interpolations and cut off false requirements; but this revision did not exclude extensions and additions which had been made in order to fill up in something more than a negative manner the ground occupied by the errors and heresies that had crept in. — from The History of Antiquity, Vol. 4 (of 6) by Max Duncker
95 inner processes of, totally unknown, 96 Sucking, see Thumb-sucking ,— Symbolism of fetichism, 19 , 20 sexual, of early childhood, 55, note 19 Symptomatology of neurotic determined by infantile sexual activity, 50 of pollution-like process, 51 of neuroses traced to disturbance of the sexual processes, 67 manifested in disturbances of other non-sexual bodily functions, 67 Symptoms, creators of, are unconscious forces, 89 of psychoneuroses are the sexual activities of the patient, 27 Syphilis in fathers of more than half the cases of hysteria, compulsion-neurosis, etc., treated by Freud, 93 Temperature sensitiveness, as result of distinct erogenous action, 62 Temporal Factors, 98 Tension, sexual, loosened by copulation, 14 , 70 feeling of, 46 the psychic sign of sexual excitation, 69 unpleasant, relation of, to feeling of pleasure, 70 increase in changing to displeasure, 71 increased by functions of erogenous zones, 71 of libido dies away at orgasm, 71 too little, endangers attainment of sexual aim, 72 Tertiary sex characteristics, 8 Theatre as source of sexual excitement through fear, 64 Thumb-sucking as model of infantile sexual manifestations, 42 a sexual activity, 43 as remnant of oral phase of pregenital sexual organization, 59 Thyroid gland, rôle of, in sexuality, 76 Tickling analogous to rhythmic sucking, 45 demanding onanistic gratification, 51 Toe, sucking of, 42 Tongue, sucking of, 42 Touching as preliminary to sexual aim, 14 and looking, 20 hand as addition to attraction of sexual object, 70 Transference neuroses, 77 of erogenous excitability from clitoris to vagina, 81 Transformation of puberty, 68 success of, dependent on adjustment to dispositions and impulses, 68 Transgressions, anatomical, 15 especially frequent, are those to mouth and anus, 29 Ulrich, 9 Unconscious, all neurotics have feelings of inversion in, 29 nothing in, corresponds to fetichism, 30 psychic material is the source of compulsions, 51 forces revealing themselves as symptom creators, 89 Uranism, 5, note 7 Urinary apparatus, the guardian of the genital, 51 Vagina, glandular activity of, the somatic sign of sexual excitation, 69 Vomiting, hysterical, evinced after repression of thumb-sucking, 44 Voyeurs (see Looking , Peeping , Exhibitionism ) as examples of overcoming of loathing, 21 exhibitionists are at the same time, 30 children become, 54 Wishes, symptoms of hysteria are substitutes for, 27 Wit as source of greater knowledge of pleasure, 72 Woman (see Masculine and feminine ) regression in sex development of, 68 differentiation between man and, 78 Work, intellectual, as sexual excitement, 65 Zola, 96 Zone, chief erogenous, in female child is the clitoris, 80 Zones, erogenous, 31 characters of, 45 predestined, 46 lips as erogenous, 44 all parts of body may become erogenous, 46 genital, gratification of, taught by seduction, 52 erogenous, premature activity of, indicated by cruelty, 54 parts of skin called, 65 lip, responsible for sexual gratification during eating, 66 primacy of genital, 69 erogenous, prepare sexual excitement, 70 leading, in man and woman, 80 Volume VII July, 1920 Number 3 The Psychoanalytic Review A Journal Devoted to an Understanding of Human Conduct EDITED AND PUBLISHED BY WILLIAM A. WHITE, M.D., and SMITH ELY JELLIFFE, M.D. CONTENTS ORIGINAL ARTICLES Freud's Concept of the "Censorship". — from Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex by Sigmund Freud
This tab, called Hiding in Plain Sight,
shows you passages from notable books where your word is accidentally (or perhaps deliberately?)
spelled out by the first letters of consecutive words.
Why would you care to know such a thing? It's not entirely clear to us, either, but
it's fun to explore! What's the longest hidden word you can find? Where is your name hiding?