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The phrase "was going insane" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe someone's mental state or behavior, indicating that they were becoming increasingly unstable or irrational. Example: "As the stress of his job and personal life piled up, John felt like he was going insane. He started having panic attacks and couldn't focus on anything for more than a few minutes."
Exact(20)
"I was going insane cramped up in an apartment building.
"I thought I was going insane," she said, adding, "My baby was gone".
After "Faun," Nijinsky choreographed three more pieces, but meanwhile he was going insane.
"I was going insane". He had previously contemplated the possibility of trying to live in Barbados, where he had relatives.
Highsmith hinted in her notes for "Ripley Under Water" that she feared her beloved Tom was going insane.
Her grief upon her brother's death was so great, she said, that she felt she was going insane.
Similar(40)
I'm going insane.
'It feels like you're going insane.
It was packed and the fans were going insane.
He just cleaned everybody up, and people were going insane, and the stakes got higher.
For unclear reasons, her parents and those of her friends are going insane.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com