extraversion

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English

Etymology

From New Latin extrāversio, from Classical Latin extrā- (outside) + versio (a turning). Equivalent to extravert +‎ -sion. Popularized as a psychological term by the German works of Carl Jung.

Noun

extraversion (countable and uncountable, plural extraversions)

  1. Alternative spelling of extroversion
    • 1675, Robert Boyle, “Of the Imperfection of the Chymist's Doctrine of Qualities”, in The Mechanical Origine or Production of Corrosiveness and Corrosibility, page 36:
      ...the supposed Extraversion or Intraversion of Sulphur...
    • 1915, Carl Jung, “On Psychological Understanding”, in Journal of Abnormal Psychology, number 9, page 396:
      I called the hysterical type the extraversion type and the psychasthénic type the introversion type.

Usage notes

Technical papers in psychology still prefer the variant extraversion used by Carl Jung, although the spelling extroversion is more common in general use.

Derived terms

References

French

Etymology

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Pronunciation

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Noun

extraversion f (plural extraversions)

  1. extroversion

Further reading