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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a insane" is not correct in English.
It should be "an insane." You can use "an insane" when describing something that is extremely crazy or irrational, typically in a figurative sense.
Example: "The idea of running a marathon without any training seemed an insane decision to everyone."
Alternatives: "a crazy" or "a ludicrous".
Exact(4)
"Anyone Can Whistle" is dedicated to the proposition that all men and women are equally a) insane and b) sane, and it goes to fanciful, tedious lengths to expound this theory.
If you don't have an iPhone you're considered (a) insane; (b) challenged in some vital way, like straggly-bearded men at bus stops who wear odd shoes and a folded newspaper hat; (c) a suitable target to have your head flushed down the bog by a few of the lads from the graphic design dept.
Tucked away in The Box, with a insane soundsystem, the man was in fine fettle.
It should not come as a surprise that if in the coming days the world were to wake up to the news about a insane military move by Turkey, be it a ground invasion or a military intervention.
Similar(56)
This is a book by an insane person".
Landing a rocket backwards is an insane trick.
"Not a backward people, but an insane country," he remarked.
Bangalore has an insane disengage as a passive.
Do an insane cover of a not so insane song, anything that could go viral you should do it.
"This was just an insane plan by an insane man," Mr. Konoski said.
It seems like an insane way to run a civilisation.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com