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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a frantic mood" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a state of anxiety, urgency, or extreme agitation in a person or situation.
Example: "As the deadline approached, she found herself in a frantic mood, rushing to complete her project."
Alternatives: "a frenzied state" or "a chaotic mindset."
Exact(1)
Even now, he says "there's a frantic mood, as studios try to get projects finished in time".
Similar(59)
The horror as you realise just before you land that it's packed with enemy drones is genuine, as battle takes on a considered yet still slightly frantic mood.
Even the calmest crowd can turn dangerous when its members are in a frantic, angry mood.
Perhaps he was unsettled by the frantic mood of Ravi Bopara, who survived a close stumping call off his first ball, a reviewed lbw appeal on one, and could have run out both himself and Morgan in the same over.
Such cramming and crowding of the frame is presumably designed to convey the frantic mood of the era: quite a contrast to the art of Gordon Willis, who filmed "All the President's Men" as if he were holding his breath, waiting and watching to see what, or who, might emerge from the quiet shadows.
The five movements of his String Quartet No. 2 (1968), given a committed and detailed interpretation here, traverse a wide range of textures and sounds and an equally diverse panorama of emotions, incorporating a range of expressive and often quirky gestures that evoke somber, calm and frantic moods.
Why, he wonders, did he marry "such a frantic, impossible woman, so unstable, even in good moods, with her exultant voice and glittery eyes, her dangerous excitement".
The mood turned from despondency to delight following a frantic late surge by Harry Redknapp's side, who are in with a shot at Premier League redemption at the first time of asking.
There, in a rapidly cut massacre that pits boy against girl and finds youngsters killing and falling and dying in a frantic, fragmented blur, Mr. Ross and his editors, Stephen Mirrione and Juliette Welfling, set the stage and stark mood.
Bayern's supporters, equally voluble, were closer to carnival mood, while Inter's were simply desperate, and giddy, as they flooded the Madrid metro with a frantic kind of energy.
All at a frantic pace.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com