Disorder in a sentence as a noun

It really sucks, and I sympathize with you, but that's the nature of the disorder.

Reading about this disorder reminds me of my sister.

Kids with the disorder have a busted enzyme that causes slow degeneration of neurons.

Sometimes I think I have multiple personality disorder, my personalities are "me in the zone" and "me not in the zone".

At what point do we recognize a disorder in a child who is unnaturally compliant and obedient?

Additionally, children exhibit mental disorders in very different ways than adult do; there are different sets of symptoms to look out for.

The people in the know now understand that what we call "burnout" is not a psychological disorder at all, but sub-clinical[1] adrenal fatigue caused by stress, period.

And it's true that overcoming your own objections to seek, and stick with, treatment for such a severe personality disorder is both impressive and admirable.

People can become much more healthy than they ever imagined possible even after years of untreated mood disorders, but it is often a whole-family effort that brings about the best results.

Disorder in a sentence as a verb

This doesn't seem to be about an accelerator as much as about a person with a behavior disorder that sounds very much like narcissistic personality disorder.

You are seriously conflating "social anxiety disorder" and "introversion.

I'm an army intelligence analyst, deployed to Eastern Baghdad, pending discharge for "adjustment disorder" in lie of "gender identity disorder.

But plenty of people have bipolar mood disorders, with various mood patterns over time, and bipolar mood disorders are tricky to treat, because some treatments that lift mood simply move patients from depression into mania.

I like thinking about mind, experience, truth, math, language, etc. I don't have a social anxiety disorder or any other type of anxiety disorder, so I'm not afraid to join a rock climbing group or any other type of group.

Certainly there is a lot of room for improvement and terms like disorder, psychopath, multiple personality, schizophrenic are abused and misused but there are behavioural patterns and characteristics by which people can be clustered.

It just means the search space is large and complex with many potholes and convergence will take a while yet.> Don't you think that, with a few weeks of study, I could apply any subset of mental disorders from the DSM-IV to any person I wished?No I don't think so.

Behavior genetic studies of whole family lineages, genome-wide association studies, and drug intervention studies have all shown that there are a variety of biological or psychological causes for mood disorders, and not all mood disorders are the same as all other mood disorders.

About 25 percent of the homelessness population has serious mental illness, including such diagnoses as chronic depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorders, and severe personality disorders.> Substance use is also prevalent among homeless populations.

Disorder definitions

noun

a physical condition in which there is a disturbance of normal functioning; "the doctor prescribed some medicine for the disorder"; "everyone gets stomach upsets from time to time"

See also: upset

noun

a condition in which things are not in their expected places; "the files are in complete disorder"

See also: disorderliness

noun

a disturbance of the peace or of public order

verb

disturb in mind or make uneasy or cause to be worried or alarmed; "She was rather perturbed by the news that her father was seriously ill"

See also: perturb unhinge disquiet trouble cark distract

verb

bring disorder to

See also: disarray