Dictionary
were depression
noun
An area that is lower in topography than its surroundings.
Exact(59)
"Those were depression days," Mr Faye recalled.
Marlene Homer, the ward whose ailments were depression and "strange thoughts," was taken away in a van, screaming.
Wilson and his wife Lois were depression vagabonds, with Wilson drinking heavily and drying up periodically in a clinic called the Towns Hospital.
If...Like Clockwork's parents were depression and shattered friendship, it had a weird and wonderful midwife to bring it in to the world.
"My parents were Depression babies," Litton told me, "and what they taught me was, it's the accumulation of things that defines you as an American, and to throw anything away was being wasteful".
I knew rich kids in the 1960's and 70's who took summer jobs in construction or as lifeguards because their parents, who were Depression children, wanted to instill certain values.
She says that American consumers "have changed in the same way there were Depression Babies who as adults would drive a car into the ground before replacing it".
Primary psychiatric diagnoses were depression (n = 169, 88.0%) and schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder (n = 80, 41.9%).
The most common medical conditions were depression (30%) and neck pain (27%).
The four key outcomes were depression, anxiety, social support, and coping.
Exclusion criteria were depression, chronic migraine or medication overuse headache according to the ICHD-III criteria [4].
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