Citations:synæsthesiæ

Noun: plural of

 * 1897, Edmund Parish, Hallucinations and Illusions, Walter Scott; Chapter VII, page #229:
 * Too little is yet known of the subject, however, to justify  us in  explaining hallucinations as “ synæsthesiæ”  ;  pending further inquiry, we must rather regard synæsthesiæ as hallucinations whose regular recurrence and fixed character point to an automatic association acquired very early in life.
 * 1898, T. K. Monro, in The Glasgow Medical Journal, Alexander Macdougall and H. K. Lewis; Volume L, №. 1, page #11:
 * These synæsthesiæ are not yet of practical importance, but they should not be laughed at, for we do not know how soon they may, like the knee‐jerk, be raised to the dignity of highly important factors in diagnosis.
 * 1905, David Fraser Harris, in The Edinburgh Medical Journal, Young J. Pentland; Volume XVIII, page #538:
 * Just as the brothers Nüssbaumer did not experience in all their respective synæsthesiæ the same colours along with the same sounds, so neither do my brother and I experience the same colours in all our corresponding psychochromes.
 * 1915, Science Progress in the Twentieth Century; Volume IX, page #135:
 * The linking together of any two kinds of sensation is called synæsthesia ; of all the possible synæsthesiæ the linking of colour and hearing is the commonest.
 * 1930, The British Journal of Inebriety; Volume XXVIII, page #106:
 * Beringer describes synæsthesiæ of sound and touch  ; some types of music made the subject feel cold, others produced a sensation of warmth.