How to Use shock therapy in a Sentence
shock therapy
noun-
But the response was to have to give her electric shock therapy.
— Wilson Chapman, Variety, 15 Apr. 2022 -
The Perfection Years of shaving her head for shock therapy can do quite a number on a gal’s hair.
— Joey Nolfi, EW.com, 24 June 2019 -
Unlike shock therapy, which jolts the whole brain, TMS penetrates only an inch or so.
— Gregory Mone, Discover Magazine, 31 Aug. 2012 -
It’s like the girl who was electrocuted, who got electric shock therapy.
— Chris Willman, Variety, 18 Dec. 2022 -
Nostrums such as shock therapy and stem cells rose and fell, dividing the community in their wake.
— Jason Mast Reprints, STAT, 30 June 2023 -
Concern grew over reports of poor treatment, abuse, lobotomies and electric shock therapy.
— Michael Smolens Columnist, San Diego Union-Tribune, 19 Jan. 2022 -
North America’s largest bird is on the verge of extinction, and scientists are using shock therapy to give them a fighting chance.
— Carl Engelking, Discover Magazine, 31 Aug. 2015 -
Along with his sullen young assistant, Fiennes visits the asylums of the West Coast performing lobotomies and electric shock therapy.
— Los Angeles Times, 25 July 2019 -
He was hospitalized for six months and subjected to shock therapy.
— Larry Blumenfeld, WSJ, 14 Sep. 2022 -
Psychiatric treatments of the past, such as lobotomies or shock therapy, failed to adequately protect patients.
— Olivia Goldhill, Quartz, 16 Oct. 2020 -
Try electric shock therapy, drugs that render men impotent, or maybe even a lobotomy.
— Jane M. Von Bergen, Philly.com, 1 Oct. 2017 -
Kwarteng’s mini-budget appears to be creating a kind of supply-side economics shock therapy for Britain.
— Adam Taylor, Washington Post, 29 Sep. 2022 -
Hard to believe now, but Russia’s leadership wanted to use shock therapy after the collapse of the Soviet Union to create a market economy and align closely with the West.
— Jon Talton, The Seattle Times, 4 Dec. 2018 -
This gradualist recipe, intended to avoid the upheaval of past economic shock therapies, relied heavily on fresh credit to plug the deficit.
— Ryan Dube, WSJ, 29 May 2018 -
So the shock therapy of that earlier era might be unnecessarily painful.
— Joel Mathis, The Week, 12 July 2022 -
The Yeltsin years would bring new freedoms but also economic shock therapy, chaos, corruption and hardship for many ordinary Russians.
— The New York Times, New York Times, 30 Dec. 2022 -
Solzhenitsyn abhorred the shock therapy and unchecked capitalism of the 1990s and preferred Putin’s tough nationalism.
— Washington Post, 28 Oct. 2021 -
He’s made a scary movie that balances psychological shock therapy with old-fashioned fright, shadowy dread with blunt splatterfest FX, an artsy-fartsy sense of stylistics slapped on to a twisty B-movie scenario.
— David Fear, Rolling Stone, 29 Sep. 2022 -
And the intimacy here between this audience and this comedian differs from the national shock therapy from a few weeks before.
— New York Times, 19 Apr. 2022 -
Researchers at Brigham Young University, which is owned by the church, allegedly used electric shock therapy to attempt to cure homosexuality in the 1970s.
— Tara Law, Time, 1 Dec. 2019 -
But not long after, the rumors began: Eagleton had been hospitalized for depression the decade before and undergone shock therapy.
— Peggy Drexler, CNN, 17 Feb. 2023 -
In this strategically vital nation of 100 million, a charismatic young leader is delivering shock therapy to one of the world’s most entrenched one-party systems.
— Matina Stevis-Gridneff, WSJ, 17 July 2018 -
The practice has taken many forms historically, including shock therapy and hypnosis, but the most common form today is talk therapy, according to the study.
— Orlando Mayorquin, USA TODAY, 15 June 2022 -
Paul Volcker’s shock therapy brought down inflation and made fiscal borrowing more acceptable to bond markets; meanwhile, the structural decline in growth rates enhanced the willingness of politicians to lean against sluggish growth.
— Paul Swartz, Fortune, 3 Mar. 2022 -
Some Republicans who are vociferously pro-Trump sound, in conversations about the Party’s future, more like Restorationists who regard him as a temporary jolt of shock therapy.
— Nicholas Lemann, The New Yorker, 23 Oct. 2020 -
Some of the most extreme measures have included electric shock therapy, hormone regimens, physical abuse and internment.
— Washington Post, 9 Dec. 2021 -
Since rising to power last year after months of political violence, Mr. Ahmed, a former intelligence officer has sought to deliver shock therapy to one of the world’s most entrenched one-party systems.
— Joe Parkinson, WSJ, 23 June 2019 -
Because the problems are so large, shock therapy that increases numbers immediately might create a critical mass.
— C. Brandon Ogbunu, Wired, 25 May 2021 -
Because Jack and friends know that addressing institutional barriers requires much more than shock therapy.
— C. Brandon Ogbunu, Wired, 25 May 2021 -
Sunak’s decision not to extend a blanket furlough plan leaves unemployment headed for levels not seen since Thatcher implemented her shock therapy.
— David Goodman, Bloomberg.com, 5 Oct. 2020
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'shock therapy.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Last Updated: