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Addict   /ədˈɪkt/  /ˈædˌɪkt/   Listen
Addict

verb
(past & past part. addicted; pres. part. addicting)
1.
To cause (someone or oneself) to become dependent (on something, especially a narcotic drug).  Synonym: hook.
noun
1.
Someone who is so ardently devoted to something that it resembles an addiction.  Synonyms: freak, junkie, junky, nut.  "A car nut" , "A bodybuilding freak" , "A news junkie"
2.
Someone who is physiologically dependent on a substance; abrupt deprivation of the substance produces withdrawal symptoms.



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"Addict" Quotes from Famous Books



... which must be expected to operate in the poor as well as in the rich, is another occasion of the misuse of benevolent aid. The friendly supply is consumed upon their lusts. Abandoned in character and selfish in principle, many heads of poor families addict themselves to bad company, despoiling their families of their earnings and of charitable supplies, and stupifying their consciences in the cup of intoxication. The discovery of such a misapplication ought not to ...
— Female Scripture Biographies, Vol. II • Francis Augustus Cox

... spindle-shaped body traversed the disk of the sun, but at a great distance from the sun. The writer in the Register says: "In a word, we know of nothing to have recourse to, in the heavens, by which to explain this phenomenon." I suppose he was not a hopeless addict to explaining. Extraordinary—we fear he must have been a man of loose habits in ...
— The Book of the Damned • Charles Fort

... lamented that antiquarian zeal is so often diverted from subjects of real to those of merely fanciful interest. The mercurial young gentlemen who addict themselves to that exciting department of letters are open to censure as being too fitful, too prone to flit, bee-like, from flower to flower, now lighting momentarily upon an indecipherable tombstone, now perching ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 2, Issue 10, August, 1858 • Various

... assentingly but more happily observed: "Yes: though she seems to be standing on this side of the counter, she is perhaps really standing on the other."—As I regard such Exhibitions as among the very best pursuits to which Royalty can addict itself, I should not give utterance to this presumption if I did not esteem it creditable to Victoria both as a Briton and a Queen. And it is very plain that her conduct in the premises is daily, among her subjects, diffusing and deepening ...
— Glances at Europe - In a Series of Letters from Great Britain, France, Italy, - Switzerland, &c. During the Summer of 1851. • Horace Greeley

... for many years; although, in the pursuit of the distinctions which my father sought, I continued to addict myself to controversy. When about twenty-five years old, and my beard had acquired a respectable consistency, I went to Ispahan in order to improve myself by associating with our celebrated doctors, ...
— The Adventures of Hajji Baba of Ispahan • James Morier


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