Rumination in a sentence as a noun

When they delivered her first Porsche, instead of being happy and high, my sister had a soul crushing rumination.

> They began by focusing on the thought process that defines the disorder, which is known as rumination.

Same thing at exams in school or university - my mind just went blank and into a noisy self-rumination loop.

Some ideas take days of rumination before you fully grasp the implications so you just have to take the time to let them sink-in.

The relevant term for what you describe in psychology circles is "rumination" in case you're interested in that kind of thing.

This was my personal rumination on the differences between the two approaches to OOP. Or a way to verbalize it, if you will.> to my knowledge, you most definitely can not do that in such a manner in Self.

My mild tendency to depression seems to be predicated entirely on rumination.

Bob, who has 500,000 proxies on education policy after a lifetime of careful study, experience and rumination, is suddenly exposed as being gay. Fox News hints he's in league with the *****.

The white type over the various busy backgrounds was so undressable, I couldn't take any of the other rumination a seriously.

No amount of solitary mental rumination will yield a revelation about how effective certain UI features are with users.

Long-form encourages repetitive rumination, digression, and purple prose at least as much as it does detail & ornate linguistic aesthetics.

OT performance rumination: I've not run tests on Rails' performance in this capacity, but I've always thought that the runtime gymnastics to pluralize model names would be a big drag on Rails performance.

What I have to say may seem glib and simplistic, but that is because it is the result of extended rumination on a long series of deeply unpleasant situations that I found myself in earlier in life.

Rumination definitions

noun

a calm, lengthy, intent consideration

See also: contemplation reflection reflexion musing thoughtfulness

noun

(of ruminants) chewing (the cud); "ruminants have remarkable powers of rumination"

noun

regurgitation of small amounts of food; seen in some infants after feeding