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Paralyze (Word Sum (para+ lyze (<para> (Greek para- , "beside,…
Paralyze
Word Sum
para + ly+ ze
para+ lyze
<para>
Greek para- , "beside, near, issuing from, against, contrary to,"
para + ly+sis
<lyein>
<leu->
to loosen, divide, cut apart
loosen, unite
word Family
Meaning to Topic
To not be able to move because of fear, stress, and insecurities.
For people whith Mental Health it can feel like the brain is shuting down/off every part of our body. Which then allowes the darkness sneaks in to change thinking positive to negative.
This happen to people with mental health because they are a fear, stress, or there insecurites are coming to light.
Meaning Etymoline
Paralysis
the loss of the ability to move (and sometimes to feel anything) in part or most of the bod
1520s, from Latin paralysis, from Greek paralysis "paralysis, palsy," literally "loosening," from paralyein "disable, enfeeble," from para- "beside" (see para- (1)) + lyein "loosen, untie" (from PIE root *leu- "to loosen, divide, cut apart").
1804, from French paralyser (16c.), from Old French paralisie "paralysis," from Latin paralysis (see paralysis). Figurative use from 1805. Related: Paralyzed; paralyzing.
Other words
Darkness
meaning
Etym
Old English deorcnysse "absence of light," from dark (adj.) + -ness. The 10c. Anglo-Saxon treatise on astronomy uses þeostrum for "darkness." Figurative use for "sinfulness, wickedness" is from early 14c. From late 14c. as "obscurity," also "secrecy, concealment," also "blindness," physical, mental, or spiritual.
Topic
it is when your mind can only thinking of what will going wrong instead of anything good and happy. This can feel like a person in our heads but reallys its ourself allowing ourself to make them.
Word Sum
Dark + ness
Middle English derk, later dark, from Old English deorc, "sad, cheerless; sinister, wicked,"
Connotation
Paralyze sound to be a negative word meaning you can no longer move. However,