acting out

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acting out

A child is acting out by throwing a tantrum in the grocery store.

Definition
  1. Noun:
    • The expression of previously suppressed emotions: In psychiatry, "acting out" refers to the behavioral display of emotions that were previously inhibited or repressed, often through actions instead of verbal communication. This process is sometimes considered a healthy and therapeutic release.
    • An impulsive and disruptive behavioral outburst: It can also describe a sudden, often irritating, uncontrollable outburst of behavior, typically exhibited by a child with behavioral problems or a neurotic adult.
Usage Examples
  • Noun:
    • The therapist noted that the patient's angry outburst was not mere aggression but a necessary acting out of long-repressed childhood trauma.
    • The child's tantrum in the store was a classic case of acting out due to frustration and an inability to express his needs verbally.
Advanced Usage
  • In therapeutic contexts: The term is used technically to describe a process where unconscious conflicts or emotions are expressed through behavior, which can be a crucial step in therapy.
    • In psychoanalysis, acting out is distinguished from remembering and verbalizing feelings.
  • In everyday, non-clinical language: It is often used more loosely to describe someone (especially a child) behaving badly or disruptively to express an emotional state.
    • Stop acting out just because you didn't get your way.
Variants and Related Words
  • Act out (phrasal verb): To express thoughts or emotions through one's actions, often disruptively.
    • Children often act out when they are tired or hungry.
  • Acting-out (adjective form): Used attributively to describe such behavior.
    • The teacher had to manage an acting-out student.
Synonyms
  • Lashing out: Reacting with sudden violent or verbal aggression.
  • Melting down: Having an uncontrolled emotional outburst or collapse (common for children).
  • Venting: Giving expression to a strong emotion, though this is more often verbal.
Related Phrases and Phrasal Verbs
  • Act up: To behave badly or dysfunctionally. While similar, "act up" is more general and less specific to emotional expression than "act out."
    • The old computer is acting up again. / The children started to act up during the long car ride.
Related Idioms
  • Throw a fit: To have a sudden, uncontrolled outburst of anger or bad temper. This is a more informal idiom similar to one meaning of "acting out."
    • The toddler threw a fit when his toy was taken away.
acting out

A child is acting out by throwing a tantrum in the grocery store.

Noun
  1. (psychiatry) the display of previously inhibited emotions (often in actions rather than words); considered to be healthy and therapeutic
  2. a (usually irritating) impulsive and uncontrollable outburst by a problem child or a neurotic adult