introversion

Etymology
From New, from , from Classical and. Equivalent to.

Noun

 * 1) A turning inward, particularly:
 * 2) The action of turning one's thoughts upon internal or spiritual matters.
 * 3)  A personality orientation towards the self and mental abstraction; behavior expressing such orientation.
 * 4) * 1912, Trigant Burrow, "Conscious and Unconscious Mentation from the Psychoanalytic Viewpoint", Psychological Bulletin, No. 9, p. 159:
 * ...so that when in later life there occurs an introversion (in the sense of Jung), it consists of a harking back to regressive, reminiscent, infantile material.
 * 1)  Arrangement of two similar words, lines, etc. to form the middle part of a structure.
 * 1)  A personality orientation towards the self and mental abstraction; behavior expressing such orientation.
 * 2) * 1912, Trigant Burrow, "Conscious and Unconscious Mentation from the Psychoanalytic Viewpoint", Psychological Bulletin, No. 9, p. 159:
 * ...so that when in later life there occurs an introversion (in the sense of Jung), it consists of a harking back to regressive, reminiscent, infantile material.
 * 1)  Arrangement of two similar words, lines, etc. to form the middle part of a structure.
 * 1)  Arrangement of two similar words, lines, etc. to form the middle part of a structure.
 * 1)  Arrangement of two similar words, lines, etc. to form the middle part of a structure.
 * 1)  Arrangement of two similar words, lines, etc. to form the middle part of a structure.

Translations

 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Czech: introverze
 * Finnish: sisäänpäinsuuntautuneisuus,
 * German: Introversion
 * Japanese: ,
 * Lithuanian: intravertiškumas
 * Persian: درون‌گرایی
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:
 * Turkish:
 * Vietnamese: hướng nội