|
MADNESS |
Mania |
|
CRAZE |
Mania |
|
MANIE |
Mania; insanity. |
|
METROMANIA |
A mania for writing verses. |
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|
BIBLIOMANIA |
A mania for acquiring books. |
|
BIBLIOMANIAC |
One who has a mania for books. |
|
ELEUTHEROMANIA |
A mania or frantic zeal for freedom. |
|
MANIAC |
Raving with madness; raging with disordered intellect;
affected with mania; mad. |
|
|
ANGLOMANIA |
A mania for, or an inordinate attachment to, English
customs, institutions, etc. |
|
XENOMANIA |
A mania for, or an inordinate attachment to, foreign
customs, institutions, manners, fashions, etc. |
|
MANIA |
Excessive or unreasonable desire; insane passion affecting
one or many people; as, the tulip mania. |
|
CHEROOT |
A kind of cigar, originally brought from Mania, in the
Philippine Islands; now often made of inferior or adulterated tobacco. |
|
ATRABILIARY |
Melancholic or hypohondriac; atrabilious; -- from the
supposed predominance of black bile, to the influence of which the
ancients attributed hypochondria, melancholy, and mania. |
|
DELIRIUM |
... some other
disease, and so distinguished from mania, or madness. ... |