depressoid
English
Etymology 1
From depress + -oid (“resembling”).
Pronunciation
Audio (General Australian): (file)
Adjective
depressoid (comparative more depressoid, superlative most depressoid)
- Resembling depression.
- 1982, Psychiatric Annals, volume 16, page 304:
- […] of the difficulties in differentiating the "depressoid" picture of acute grief from the clinical depressions that may evolve later, […]
- 1987, Sidney Zisook, Biophysical Aspects of Bereavement, American Psychiatric Press, →ISBN, page 183:
- The major problem for the clinician involves the differentiation of those states which represent "real" depression from those "depressoid" states associated with grief.
- 1993, Therese A. Rando, Treatment of Complicated Mourning, Research Press, →ISBN, page 210:
- They recommend that such depressions be treated with antidepressants whether evolved from the depressoid state of acute grief or not.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:depressoid.
Etymology 2
From depress + -oid (“derogatory suffix”).
Pronunciation
Audio (General Australian): (file)
Adjective
depressoid (comparative more depressoid, superlative most depressoid)
- (slang, derogatory) Depressing or miserable.
- 2007, Thrity Umrigar, If Today Be Sweet, Harper Perennial, →ISBN, page 250:
- “The ski trip? Oh, God, what a depressoid bust. It turned out we didn't have reservations at the place we thought we did. […]
Noun
depressoid (plural depressoids)
- (slang, derogatory) A depressed or miserable person.
- 1982, Jean Rosenbaum, Veryl Rosenbaum, The Writer's Survival Guide, Writer's Digest Books, →ISBN, page 140:
- […] I have no time for prolonged sadness or self-pity because I am making a living. People care little about your failures and don't enjoy the company of a depressoid. […]
- 1992 May 19, Wayne Robins, “The Cure: An Antidote For Gloom”, in Newsday:
- Those who think of the Cure as a band of depressoids playing dark music for adolescent introverts could not imagine how determined it was to let the sun shine into Nassau Coliseum Friday night.
- 2011, Mindy Kaling, Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns), Crown Archetype, →ISBN, page 142:
- It's always been incredibly challenging for me to put pen to page, because writing, at its heart, is a solitary pursuit, designed to make people depressoids, drug addicts, misanthropes, and antisocial weirdos (see every successful writer ever except Judy Blume).
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:depressoid.