27 example sentences using neurotic.
Neurotic used in a sentence
Neurotic in a sentence as a noun
"I'm a neurotic mess." "I'm a programmer, so I could never be a good writer."
This isn't inspiring, this is neurotic. Mental illness is no way to live.
Three total rewrites and it's still neurotic on a good day. -- iPhoto is goddamn slow.
It's not a surprise that so many people are neurotic. It's not a surprise that it makes us a bit happier to have that situation partially fulfilled.
In fact, it looks like a stubborn, neurotic horse that insists on only turning to the right. It looks compulsive, and subtly fear-driven.
Although perhaps you could go back further and ask, what made the men neurotic in the first place, was it cruel rejection or bullying by prom queens - no idea. I just found the phrasing backwards.
If Allen is half as neurotic as he seems you can imagine him spending a lot of time deciding what to eat and what not. Just nukeing the option -- will not eat frankfurters, period.
This strikes me as far too neurotic. You'll never get through the challenges of parenting if you are second guessing yourself and scolding yourself for such minor infractions.
Teenagers now are neurotic lapdogs. Their craziness is the craziness of the idle everywhere."
It's a blessing, that's for sure, I can now much better strategize my life, but there are also some downsides, like an uptick in neurotic behavior. I'm currently working on changing my website, winfred.
People of a more manic bent can engage just about anyone in a fast-paced, neurotic conversation. The happier people I know are often under the impression that most people are more or less satisfied with their existence.
Inevitably, some of those people will be, uh, neurotic. Some of those people belong to watch-dog groups which may or may not have motivations aside from playing out internal "rescuer" psychodramas.
I think she is a little bit neurotic, and she missed all the evolutionary stuff - that we are hardwired for social interaction. I live an overly solitary life, and I crave for company.
Neurotic in a sentence as an adjective
It has its limits though, and I felt like an neurotic idiot tapping\n my wrists all the time. * What really worked - Philosophy; Getting a genuine core philosophy and actively deciding my values gave me a lot of strength.
My brother in law is from Denmark and he told me about this practice many years ago as a way of relating to me just how neurotic and afraid parents are in America. I asked him why he moved here, and he said "America is where you get rich".
He doesn't strike me as a neurotic Microsoft evangelist salesman like Steve Ballmer. I would love to see Nadella's Microsoft get more involved in open source projects, and win back some developer love that has become lost in darker years.
It can seem bureaucratic and neurotic, and it is, but it keeps things running relatively smoothly for the regulars, which is the important part. The people who take the time to learn the ropes are the ones who end up ensuring that the content is useful and informative.
Consumers that are highly neurotic about the road trip problem are much more likely to remember these sorts of horror stories when making a purchasing decision.
I left because they fired my charismatic manager and the firm's culture grew neurotic as the scandals and random terminations piled on. I saw the over-worked, sociopathic, misanthropic archetypes.
The industry is full of people who launched less impressive things than this, promoted their work ruthlessly and without neurotic humility, and later went on to run the table on their competitors.
Mainstream narrative filmmaking always follows the hero's journey, whether your hero is a neurotic writer in new york, a young black girl in New Orleans, or a genetically modified super hero. Summer blockbusters these days are focused on something different.
You said it best -- the process you describe above is reflective of a paranoid, neurotic obsession to have "the best" engineers, for some definition of best. Whether or not we agree on what constitutes "best" is not important, but if you insist that people who refuse, or fail, your particular method are bozos then you have your head stuck firmly up your ***.
I also remember that one participant had their habit of standing around outside the cafeteria waiting for it to open for lunch noted down by a nurse as "neurotic behaviour around eating and food" and again framed as part of their disorder and used as a reason to keep them there. Remember though that this was in america in the 70s, and things have changed a lot since then.
No management changes were made, but apparently I did have some impact: The gradeschool teachers got even more hysterical and neurotic after I left, starting to accuse employees of paranoid conspiracies, etc. More and more people started resigning.
Becoming disproportionately angry about arbitrary linguistic differences is a treasured national pastime in the UK. It's due to our very particularly neurotic class consciousness, and it's quite difficult to explain. UK english is a minefield of shibboleths which we use to pigeonhole each other with startling efficiency.
That feeling in your gut that there's something wrong with what you're doing, even though you know what you're doing is completely reasonable, is from having internalised the dominant culture's view on work, which from an anglo-american context probably means suspicion of anything which doesn't place an emphasis on a projection of looking busy like a labourer on a factory line with some kind of neurotic rendition of the protestant work ethic. Obviously if your boss is a tool, or has issue with it, even though its reasonable, whether to continue on with it any way is up to you.
Proper Noun Examples for Neurotic
Neurotic, perhaps. Something that ultimately was consuming his time for no good purpose other than that he was locked into a pattern and couldn't see beyond it.
Neurotic definitions
a person suffering from neurosis
See also: psychoneurotic
characteristic of or affected by neurosis; "neurotic disorder"; "neurotic symptoms"
affected with emotional disorder
See also: psychoneurotic