Lexicographical Neighbors of Constellating
Literary usage of Constellating
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1911)
"... "constellating" of an association is mostly unconscious, the complex playing
the role of a quasi-independent existence, a "second consciousness. ..."
2. Southey's Common-place Book by Robert Southey (1876)
"Mode of constellating it, and otherwise so preparing as to preserve the spirit.
1028. The Ethiopian way of making it from a healthy prisoner. ..."
3. Movement and Mental Imagery: Outlines of a Motor Theory of the Complexer by Margaret Floy Washburn (1916)
"... according as its associative tendencies are limited and directed, by the
constellating effect of the context or by a directing idea. ..."
4. The English Rock-garden by Reginald John Farrer (1919)
"... losing something of its brilliancy and neat and gem-like beauty as you see it
constellating the green downs of Chateau-Gaillard with its gold-eyed stars ..."
5. The History of Hindostan: Its Arts, and Its Sciences, as Connected with the by Thomas Maurice (1820)
"... in which are transmitted down to posterity the mythological conceptions of
the Syrians and the Indians. Concerning the occasion of the constellating ..."
6. Collected papers on analytical psychology by Carl Gustav Jung, Constance Ellen Long (1917)
"In the place of the father, with his constellating virtues and faults, there
appears, on the one hand, an altogether sublime deity, on the other the devil, ..."