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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a mad panic for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a frantic or chaotic situation where people are desperately seeking something or trying to obtain it.
Example: "There was a mad panic for tickets when the concert was announced, and they sold out within minutes."
Alternatives: "a frenzied rush for" or "a wild scramble for".
Exact(1)
Typically there is a mad panic for drawings so that materials can be ordered to meet the tight deadline.
Similar(59)
She said she went into a "mad panic" at receiving the automated call this morning and hunted for her home insurance policy.
A former shadow cabinet minister said he and others in the party were in a "mad panic", with some colleagues thinking about whether it was possible to replace Corbyn with a caretaker leader in time for the election.
In a mad panic we went round and undid every single one and took out the batteries.
Although a mad panic followed, the trophy was located soon after, luckily in the hands of an ECB employee.
A mad panic began to consume me.
We've all been there - the mad panic of realising you've overslept and have a matter of seconds to get to work.
With his art for Mad, for Panic, for lesser-known humor magazines like Trump and Help! and, finally, for Playboy, Elder found a window to the junior-high-school soul and chucked rocks through it, exposing that teen spirit in all its confused, hyperactive, self-absorbed glory and scariness.
Had there been a mad stampede for pizza?
You'd have had a mad dash for assets worldwide".
I have such a mad respect for theater actors.
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