¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Subliminally
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Subliminally
Literary usage of Subliminally
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1908)
"ON THE AFTER-IMAGES OF Subliminally COLORED STIMULI. ... Provided that the
subliminally colored stimulus appears on a neutral (black, gray or white) ..."
2. Proceedings of the American Society for Psychical Research by American Society for Psychical Research (1913)
"This occurs in hysterics, and hypnosis will show that in the hypnotic state the
object was subliminally seen and known. But the normal consciousness did not ..."
3. Human Personality and Its Survival of Bodily Death by Frederic William Henry Myers (1903)
"SECOND SERIES :—PHENOMENA Subliminally CONTROLLED. i. ... (6) Production of heat,
and other specific effects upon matter, subliminally modified. ..."
4. Human personality and its survival of bodily death by Frederic William Henry Myers (1906)
"SECOND SERIES: — PHENOMENA Subliminally CONTROLLED. 1. ... (b) Production of
heat, and other specific effects upon matter, subliminally modified. ..."
5. Borderland of Psychical Research by James Hervey Hyslop (1906)
"Here again the sensory impressions were subliminally perceived, though the normal
consciousness was not aware of them. The functions of the mind were so ..."
6. Borderland of Psychical Research by James Hervey Hyslop (1906)
"Here again the sensory impressions were subliminally perceived, though the normal
consciousness was not aware of them. The functions of the mind were so ..."
7. Borderland of Psychical Research by James Hervey Hyslop (1906)
"Here again the sensory impressions were subliminally perceived, though the normal
consciousness was not aware of them. The functions of the mind were so ..."
8. Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research by Society for Psychical Research, Edmund Gurney (1894)
"Even those physical phenomena,— whatever their ultimate source,—are in the
percipient subliminally initiated, and depend upon intimate processes which never ..."