From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishneurosisneu‧ro‧sis /njʊˈrəʊsɪs $ nʊˈroʊ-/ noun (plural neuroses /-siːz/) [countable, uncountable] medical MPa mental illness that makes someone unreasonably worried or frightened
Examples from the Corpus
neurosis• He identified a variety of mild psychiatric problems, principally neurotic depression and anxiety neurosis, in 86 percent of them.• Then, artillery was aimed straight at the psychoanalytic heart: at neurosis!• The price that has to be paid, in extreme form, is neurosis.• Always a private dentist, because of my neurosis.• Expressions of pain as the examination takes place rouse irritation or accusations of neurosis.• What for Camus was a source of strength is, for me, a source of neurosis.• Another persistent neurosis for the county has been their running between the wickets.• In this case a budding urethral neurosis was nipped before it could really blossom.