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The phrase "half crazed" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who is in a state of mental agitation or irrationality.
Example: "After days without sleep, he felt half crazed and unable to think clearly."
Alternatives: "partially insane" or "somewhat deranged."
Exact(7)
That Gordon: half crazed, despairing, gripped by Shakespearian rage and madness.
There is one photograph that has become synonymous with the trial - Marshall is outside the hospital, on her mobile phone, half crazed, literally crying for help.
Yet listen to an early recording made at Sun Studios, and he's railing at boss Sam Phillips, half crazed with the notion that he has the devil inside him.
I felt obsessed and powerful and half crazed with excitement when I thought about the gun, just as I did when I thought about the blood squares.
The creature is just a shape — pale, sightless, wild, half crazed.
She was raped and beaten so regularly that she became half crazed.
Similar(53)
She is grief-stricken, half-crazed by her unhappiness.
LIKE any network executive Erin McPherson spent the winter half-crazed over content decisions.
I'm supposed to be some side of a half-crazed Santa Claus.
He had secretly eaten an entire bag of chips and is half-crazed with thirst.
Attan Khoja, a mishmash of lean-tos and caves and half-crazed hangers-on.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com