Uncanny

//ʌnˈkæni//

"Uncanny" in a Sentence (21 examples)

She bears an uncanny resemblance to Marilyn Monroe.

Her awkwardness was uncanny.

This incident is quite uncanny.

The robot was so lifelike that it was uncanny.

In her latest works she lets the uncanny swing like a grotesque pendulum from the humorous into homelike cosiness and back again.

The resemblance is uncanny.

The resemblance between these two men is uncanny.

Their propinquity was uncanny, as they'd met only three days ago.

Tom bore an uncanny resemblance to Abraham Lincoln.

Tom bears an uncanny resemblance to Abraham Lincoln.

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He bore an uncanny resemblance to the dead sailor.

An eerie feeling came over me. She seemed uncanny and fateful.

These men had some uncanny knack of knowing when the steel was right, and like many such things, it just could not be put into a textbook on the subject.

The new iPhone promises “next level” photography with push-button ease. But the results look odd and uncanny.

This uncontrollable possibility—the possibility of a certain loss of control—can, perhaps, explain why the uncanny remains a marginal notion even within psychoanalysis itself.

As is well known, Freud introduced the concept of the uncanny into psychoanalysis in 1919 and used The Sandman as a prime illustration for his definition.

In the preceding chapter, we saw that Freud linked the maternal body, death, and the afterlife with the uncanny in his famous essay "The Uncanny" ("Das Unheimliche").

The uncanny involves feelings of uncertainty, in particular regarding the reality of who one is and what is being experienced.

Freud argued that the uncanny was particularly associated with feelings of horror aroused by the figure of the paternal castrator, neglecting the tropes of woman and animal as a source of the uncanny.

[The uncanny is] something that was long familiar to the psyche and was estranged from it only through being repressed. The link with repression now illuminates Schelling′s definition of the uncanny as ‘something that should have remained hidden and has come into the open.’ (Freud: 2003, 147 f)

Because the uncanny affects and haunts everything, it is in constant transformation and cannot be pinned down.

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