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Discover LudwigThe phrase "crazy crowded" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe a place or situation that is extremely crowded or packed with people. Example: "The concert was crazy crowded, making it difficult to move around."
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Back in 2005, Michael wrote that the user-configured AJAX homepage space was getting crazy crowded, with prominent competitors including Netvibes, PageFlakes, and iGoogle, along with a host of others.
That's crazy crowded.
Fashion's Night Out is a pretty crazy, crowded affair, but on a beautiful corner of the Meatpacking District last night, HuffPost Style had its first-ever FNO event, and we did it with a few of our favorites: fashion house Ports 1961, the Hetrick-Martin Institute, and Parsons.
Similar(56)
Mike Bowers/The Global Mail 7.44am BST Crazy crowds at Ekka.
Woman one: "This year I decided to avoid mall madness and crazy crowds.
"Look at this crazy crowd, huh?" he said with a grin, his body tense with anticipation.
I yelled at a crazy crowd surrounding me, "Everybody take off your clothes!" Then all at once the young people [took off their] T-shirts and jeans...
From day one, before the crazy crowds, before the expansion to the Village and midtown, there was an unusually excellent burger.
It's in the growing phase, but I'm into that more than the crazy crowds you get at other festivals where you're waiting in line all day, crammed into tiny venues that smell like Texans.
Mrs.Twitchell and Mrs. Harbour are discussing the Fritherbees, a. family that moved into the Manor, who couldn't seem to fit in with the crazy crowd there, and got out".
When it comes to competing I like racing in Birmingham where we have the UK trials every year, and abroad I really like racing in Brussels; you get a crazy crowd there, it's always full and they're really close.
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