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The phrase "a nutcase for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express a strong enthusiasm or obsession for something, often in a lighthearted or humorous context.
Example: "She's a nutcase for vintage vinyl records, always hunting for rare finds at flea markets."
Alternatives: "crazy about" or "obsessed with".
Exact(2)
She has been dismissed as a nutcase for years, but both David Attenborough and Daniel Dennett have recently come around.
He proposed to Pat on their first date; she considered him a "nutcase" for his impetuosity; and they married several years later.
Similar(58)
"In my day, if you'd said you'd got depression they'd've thought you were a nutcase and no good for cricket.
"I think the chances are fifty-fifty the Republicans are going to nominate a nutcase, and Hillary's the perfect foil for a Rand Paul or a Ted Cruz," he told me.
She leaves him a cute note on his car ("please don't think I'm a nutcase"), and soon after a cafe conversation they're confessing their mutual appreciation for Paul Simon's "Graceland".
Fannie – any similarities to Annie Leibovitz entirely coincidental – is a nutcase, basically; at one point she announces: "You know, I've been doing this for a long time.
He records instances of negativity and abuse, with people calling him a "junkie, or a nutcase"—instances that have made him wanted to pack in his public raving days for good.
"He's a nutcase.
What a nutcase.
Farage is not a nutcase.
I'm not a nutcase.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com