Catharsis and cathartic both trace to the Greek word kathairein, meaning “to cleanse, purge.” Catharsis entered English as a medical term having to do with purging the body—and especially the bowels—of unwanted material. The adjective cathartic entered English with a meaning descriptive of such a physically cleansing purge. It didn’t take long for people to start using these words figuratively in reference to emotional release and spiritual cleansing.
Examples of catharsis in a Sentence
She has learned to have her catharsis, take a deep breath and move on. … she does not dwell on the negative anymore.—Selena Roberts, New York Times, 24 June 2001… malevolence is expressed in his decision to absent himself from the courtroom, thereby denying some victims of his torture the catharsis of compelling him to hear their stories of survival.—George F. Will, Newsweek, 25 May 1987… there's the need for catharsis. If you play it all back a second time, you may wear away some of the pain, as you wear away a record with replaying.—Anatole Broyard, New York Times Book Review, 14 Nov. 1982As soon as we emerged from the gates of the White House, I became aware of that sea of faces. … I wanted to cry for them and with them, but it was impossible to permit the catharsis of tears.—Lady Bird Johnson24 Nov. 1963,
in A White House Diary, 1970
Acting is a means of catharsis for her.
Painting is a catharsis for me.
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to
show current usage.Read More
Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors.
Send us feedback.
Others shared in the catharsis, too — some resorting to jokes about the hectic postgame interviews Anthony Edwards and Ball furnished, some resorting to utter confusion.—
Alex Zietlow,
Charlotte Observer,
25 June 2026 Like the best episodes of The Pitt, this one is extremely stressful, alleviated by the catharsis of watching medical professionals do their jobs well.—
Ew Staff,
Entertainment Weekly,
25 June 2026 The Nationals were a strike away from catharsis when Brad Lord threw a belt-high fastball to Trea Turner, who squared it up and singled.—
Spencer Nusbaum,
New York Times,
24 June 2026 Releasing emotions that have been burrowing inside can be a spectacular kind of catharsis, especially alongside hundreds of strangers in a dark room along for the same journey.—
Barry Levitt,
Time,
19 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for catharsis
Word History
Etymology
New Latin, from Greek katharsis, from kathairein to cleanse, purge, from katharos