From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishpsychoanalystpsy‧cho‧an‧a‧lyst /ˌsaɪkəʊˈænəl-ɪst $ -koʊ-/ noun [countable] MPMNsomeone who treats patients using psychoanalysis
Examples from the Corpus
psychoanalyst• So Gould grew up to become a psychoanalyst, a kind of secular savior.• The response of a psychoanalyst might be to say, so what?• Comment: Some of us would like to be psychoanalysts.• She advanced this theory to the child psychoanalyst to whom she was delivered the next day.• Like an old-fashioned psychoanalyst, Chandler saw his task as the dismantling of illusion.• That there is aggression in work enterprises has been a phenomenon pointed to and discussed by a number of psychoanalysts.• He and other psychoanalysts have relied on dreams recollected during therapy sessions, or those they could recall themselves.• By 1985, when the psychoanalysts attempted to reintroduce masochism, a backlash against feminism, against uppity women, was current.