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Found 1 definition: craze.

craze top

Pos: Noun, Verb (usu participle), Verb (transitive)
[WORDNET DICTIONARY]

Noun craze has 3 senses

1.  craze(n = noun.cognition) cult, fad, furor, furore, rage - an interest followed with exaggerated zeal; "he always follows the latest fads"; "it was all the rage that season"
is a kind of fashion
Derived form adjective crazy5

2.  craze(n = noun.state) delirium, frenzy, fury, hysteria - state of violent mental agitation;
is a kind of mania, manic disorder
has particulars: nympholepsy, epidemic hysertia, mass hysteria
Derived forms verb craze1, adjective crazy1

3.  craze(n = noun.attribute) - a fine crack in a glaze or other surface;
is a kind of
crack
Derived form verb craze2


Verb craze has 2 senses

1.  craze(v = verb.emotion) madden - cause to go crazy; cause to lose one's mind;
Derived form noun craze2
Sample sentences: Something ----s somebody

2.  craze(v = verb.change) - develop a fine network of cracks; "Crazed ceramics"
is one way to
crack
Derived form noun craze3
Sample sentences: Something ----s


[CIDE DICTIONARY]

craze, v. t. [OE. crasen to break, fr. Scand., perh. through OF.; cf. Sw. krasa to crackle, sl, to break to pieces, F. écraser to crush, fr. the Scand. Cf. Crash.].

1.  To break into pieces; to crush; to grind to powder. See Crase. [1913 Webster]
"God, looking forth, will trouble all his host, And craze their chariot wheels." [1913 Webster]

2.  To weaken; to impair; to render decrepit. [1913 Webster]
"Till length of years,
And sedentary numbness, craze my limbs.
" [1913 Webster]

3.  To derange the intellect of; to render insane. [1913 Webster]
"Any man . . . that is crazed and out of his wits." [1913 Webster]
"Grief hath crazed my wits." [1913 Webster]


craze, v. i.

1.  To be crazed, or to act or appear as one that is crazed; to rave; to become insane. [1913 Webster]
"She would weep and he would craze." [1913 Webster]

2.  To crack, as the glazing of porcelain or pottery. [1913 Webster]


craze, n.

1.  Craziness; insanity. [1913 Webster]

2.  A strong habitual desire or fancy; a crotchet. [1913 Webster]
"It was quite a craze with him [Burns] to have his Jean dressed genteelly." [1913 Webster]

3.  A temporary passion or infatuation, as for same new amusement, pursuit, or fashion; a fad; as, the bric-a-brac craze; the æsthetic craze. [1913 Webster]
"Various crazes concerning health and disease." [1913 Webster]

4.  A crack in the glaze or enamel such as is caused by exposure of the pottery to great or irregular heat. [Webster 1913 Suppl.]


[OXFORD DICTIONARY]

craze, v. & n.
--v.
1 tr. (usu. as crazed adj.) make insane (crazed with grief).
2 a tr. produce fine surface cracks on (pottery glaze etc.). b intr. develop such cracks.
--n.
1 a a usu. temporary enthusiasm (a craze for hula hoops). b the object of this.
2 an insane fancy or condition.

Etymology:
ME, orig. = break, shatter, perh. f. ON


[ROGET DICTIONARY]

Fashion

N  fashion, style, ton, bon ton, society, good society, polite society, monde, drawing-room, civilized life, civilization, town, beau monde, high life, court, world, fashionable world, gay world, Vanity Fair, show, manners, breeding, air, demeanor, savoir faire, gentlemanliness, gentility, decorum, propriety, biens_eance, conventions of society, Mrs, Grundy, punctilio, form, formality, etiquette, point of etiquette, dress, custom, mode, vogue, go, rage, prevailing taste, fad, trend, bandwagon, furore, thing, in thing, craze, chic, last word, man of fashion, woman of fashion, man of the world, woman of the world, height of fashion, pink of fashion, star of fashion, glass of fashion, leader of fashion, arbiter elegantiarum, the beautiful people, the fashion set, upper ten thousand, elite, smart set, the four hundred, in crowd, fashionable, in fashion, a la mode, comme il faut, admitted in society, admissible in society, presentable, conventional, genteel, well-bred, well mannered, well behaved, well spoken, gentlemanlike, gentlemanly, ladylike, civil, polite, polished, refined, thoroughbred, courtly, distingue, unembarrassed, degage, janty, jaunty, dashing, fast, modish, stylish, chic, trendy, recherche, newfangled, all the rage, all the go, with it, in, faddish, in court, in full dress, in evening dress, en grande tenue, fashionably, for fashion's sake, a la francaise, a la parisienne, a l' anglaise, a l' americaine, autre temps autre mauers, chaque pays a sa guise.


Insanity

N  insanity, disordered reason, disordered intellect, diseased mind, unsound mind, abnormal mind, derangement, unsoundness, psychosis, neurosis, cognitive disorder, affective disorder, insanity, lunacy, madness, mania, rabies, furor, mental alienation, aberration, paranoia, schizophrenia, dementation, dementia, demency, phrenitis, phrensy, frenzy, raving, incoherence, wandering, delirium, calenture of the brain, delusion, hallucination, lycanthropy, brain storm, vertigo, dizziness, swimming, sunstroke, coup de soleil, siriasis, fanaticism, infatuation, craze, oddity, eccentricity, twist, monomania (caprice), kleptodipsomania, hypochondriasis, melancholia, depression, clinical depression, severe depression, hysteria, amentia, screw loose, tile loose, slate loose, bee in one's bonnet, rats in the upper story, dotage, insane, mad, lunatic, loony, crazy, crazed, aliene, non compos mentis, not right, cracked, touched, bereft of reason, all possessed, unhinged, unsettled in one's mind, insensate, reasonless, beside oneself, demented, daft, phrenzied, frenzied, frenetic, possessed, possessed with a devil, deranged, maddened, moonstruck, shatterpated, mad-brained, scatter brained, shatter brained, crackbrained, touched, tetched, off one's head, maniacal, delirious, lightheaded, incoherent, rambling, doting, wandering, frantic, raving, stark staring mad, stark raving mad, wild-eyed, berserk, delusional, hallucinatory, corybantic, dithyrambic, rabid, giddy, vertiginous, wild, haggard, mazed, flighty, distracted, distraught, depressed, agitated, hyped up, bewildered, mad as a March hare, mad as a hatter, of unsound mind, touched in one's head, wrong in one's head, not right in one's head, not in one's right mind, not right in one's wits, upper story, out of one's mind, out of one's wits, out of one's skull, far gone, out of one's senses, out of one's wits, not in one's right mind, fanatical, infatuated, odd, eccentric, hypped, hyppish, spaced out, imbecile, silly, like one possessed, the mind having lost its balance, the reason under a cloud, tet exaltee, tet montee, ira furor brevis est, omnes stultos insanire.