emotionalism
Word family
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++e·mo·tion·al·is·m /ɪˈməʊʃənəlɪzəm $ ɪˈmoʊ-/ noun [uncountable] EMOTIONALa tendency to show or feel too much emotion 易露感情;易动感情Examples from the Corpus
emotionalism• Do you suppose he has to accuse us of aggression and pull out all stops on cheap emotionalism?• Like the ring of the bell there is an authentic note which differentiates these sentiments from emotionalism or sentimentality.• Juries make decisions in criminal cases based on emotionalism.• They assume that any such challenge could only come from people corrupted by soapy emotionalism with a deep hostility to science.e·mo·tion·al·is·m nounChineseSyllable
too emotion to a feel show Corpus much tendency or
emotionalism
e‧mo‧tion‧al‧is‧m /ɪˈməʊʃənəlɪzəm $ ɪˈmoʊ-/
noun [uncountable]
e‧mo‧tion‧al‧is‧m /ɪˈməʊʃənəlɪzəm $ ɪˈmoʊ-/
noun [uncountable] Word Family: noun: emotion, emotionalism; adverb: emotionally, emotively; adjective: emotional ≠ unemotional, emotive; verb: emote
a tendency to show or feel too much emotion