mad
Audio Help [mad] Pronunciation Key adjective, mad·der, mad·dest, noun, verb, mad·ded, mad·ding.
Audio Help [mad] Pronunciation Key adjective, mad·der, mad·dest, noun, verb, mad·ded, mad·ding. –adjective
–noun
–verb (used with object)
–verb (used without object)
—Idioms
| 1. | mentally disturbed; deranged; insane; demented. |
| 2. | enraged; greatly provoked or irritated; angry. |
| 3. | (of animals)
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| 4. | extremely foolish or unwise; imprudent; irrational: a mad scheme to invade France. |
| 5. | wildly excited or confused: frantic: mad haste. |
| 6. | overcome by desire, eagerness, enthusiasm, etc.; excessively or uncontrollably fond; infatuated: He's mad about the opera. |
| 7. | wildly gay or merry; enjoyably hilarious: to have a mad time at the Mardi Gras. |
| 8. | (of wind, storms, etc.) furious in violence: A mad gale swept across the channel. |
| 9. | an angry or ill-tempered period, mood, or spell: The last time he had a mad on, it lasted for days. |
| 10. | Archaic. to make mad. |
| 11. | Archaic. to be, become, or act mad. |
| 12. | like mad, Informal. with great haste, impulsiveness, energy, or enthusiasm: She ran like mad to catch the bus. |
| 13. | mad as a hatter, completely insane. |
[Origin: bef. 900; ME mad (adj.), madden (intrans. v., deriv. of the adj.); OE gemǣd(e)d, ptp. of *gemǣdan to make mad, akin to gemād mad, foolish; c. OS geméd, OHG gimeit foolish
]
] —Synonyms 1. lunatic, maniacal, crazed, crazy. 2. furious, exasperated, raging, wrathful, irate. 4. ill-advised; unsafe, dangerous, perilous. Mad, crazy, insane are used to characterize wildly impractical or foolish ideas, actions, etc. Mad suggests senselessness and excess: The scheme of buying the bridge was absolutely mad. In informal usage, crazy suggests recklessness and impracticality: a crazy young couple. Insane is used with some opprobrium to express unsoundness and possible harmfulness: The new traffic system is simply insane. 5. frenzied.
—Antonyms 4. sensible, practical; sound, safe.
—Usage note Mad meaning “enraged, angry” has been used since 1300, and this sense is a very common one. Because some teachers and usage critics insist that the only correct meaning of mad is “mentally disturbed, insane,” mad is often replaced by angry in formal contexts: The President is angry at Congress for overriding his veto.
| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
Madded
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| mad
Audio Help (mād) Pronunciation Key
adj. mad·der, mad·dest
tr. & intr.v. mad·ded, mad·ding, mads To make or become mad; madden. [Middle English, from Old English gemǣdde, past participle of *gemǣdan, to madden, from gemād, insane; see mei-1 in Indo-European roots.] mad'dish adj. |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
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