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Discover Ludwig"crazed being" is an acceptable phrase in written English
You can use it to refer to someone who is behaving erratically, often because of a mental illness. For example, "After years of struggling with mental illness, the crazed being finally found a way to cope with his struggles."
Exact(1)
Coleridge meanwhile would often behave like a crazed being in a Gothic melodrama.Coleridge had believed that his slightly older friend they were separated by two years was capable of writing a great philosophical poem that would change the world.
Similar(59)
And, as we all know from our own brushes with sexual jealousy, being crazed is the chief symptom of the malady.
Pokerwork that is crazed is, for the main part, irreparable.
So the parties have changed, but the theme of getting your guests mad and crazed is still there".
The last chapters of "The Crazed" are a departure from the rest of the novel, a burst of frantic activity after the claustrophobia of the hospital room.
The nights were crazed, the nights were peaceful.
My already crazed emotions were even more overwhelmed as we rang in to be buzzed into the NICU.
As the second anniversary of the Virginia Tech massacre approaches, crazed gunmen are in the news again.
The long, slightly crazed Scherzo is where many performances run aground.
This crazed Irishman was a known security risk, with previous at Silverstone and the London marathon.
The crazed cadenza was all the more ferocious for the ping and clarity of Mr. Lang's playing.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com