narcissistic-personality disorder
See also: narcissistic personality disorder
English
Noun
narcissistic-personality disorder (usually uncountable, plural narcissistic-personality disorders)
- Alternative form of narcissistic personality disorder
- 1978 August 31, Chicago Sun-Times, “This quiz will tell you whether you’re too proud of yourself”, in The Argus, Rock Island, Ill., →OCLC, page 9, column 5:
- [Arnold] Goldberg is editor of “Casebook of Narcissistic-Personality Disorders” (International University Press, $17.50).
- 1982 June 5, Associated Press, “Psychiatrist denies [John] Hinckley [Jr.] was insane”, in The Arizona Republic, 93rd year, number 20, Phoenix, Ariz., →ISSN, →OCLC, page A3, columns 1–2:
- The psychiatrist [Park Dietz] diagnosed Hinckley as having four personality disorders: […] A narcissistic-personality disorder that Dietz said is “the view that one is more important than other people.”
- 2008 April 1, Associated Press, “Cops: Divorce keyed killings”, in Philadelphia Daily News, volume 84, number 1, Philadelphia, Pa., →OCLC, page 28, column 2:
- Amy Castillo, a pediatrician, requested a proctective order in Montgomery County District Court on Dec. 25, 2006, and asked that her husband receive psychiatric counseling. In her petition, she said her husband had been found two months earlier to have mood disorder and narcissistic-personality disorder.
- 2020 January 19, Fred Grimm, “Florida prosecutors believed con man, snitch”, in South Florida Sun Sentinel, volume 60, number 269, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., →ISSN, →OCLC, page 33A, column 3:
- The Texas assistant DA who prosecuted [Paul] Skulnik for sexual assault told Pamela Colloff of the[sic] New York Times and ProPublica that he was “grandiose, delusional and had narcissistic-personality disorder.”