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Craze   /kreɪz/   Listen
noun
Craze  n.  
1.
Craziness; insanity.
2.
A strong habitual desire or fancy; a crotchet. "It was quite a craze with him (Burns) to have his Jean dressed genteelly."
3.
A temporary passion or infatuation, as for same new amusement, pursuit, or fashion; a fad; as, the bric-a-brac craze; the aesthetic craze. "Various crazes concerning health and disease."
4.
(Ceramics) A crack in the glaze or enamel such as is caused by exposure of the pottery to great or irregular heat.



verb
Craze  v. t.  (past & past part. crazed; pres. part. crazing)  
1.
To break into pieces; to crush; to grind to powder. See Crase. "God, looking forth, will trouble all his host, And craze their chariot wheels."
2.
To weaken; to impair; to render decrepit. (Obs.) "Till length of years, And sedentary numbness, craze my limbs."
3.
To derange the intellect of; to render insane. "Any man... that is crazed and out of his wits." "Grief hath crazed my wits."



Craze  v. i.  
1.
To be crazed, or to act or appear as one that is crazed; to rave; to become insane. "She would weep and he would craze."
2.
To crack, as the glazing of porcelain or pottery.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Craze" Quotes from Famous Books



... prize-ring, shake hands with Tom Cribb, the champion, or drive through the streets with a celebrated boxer in his carriage; and, when Gully, the champion, could be returned as a member of Parliament for Pontefract, it is not surprising to find the craze descending through all ranks of society. I am obliged to introduce into these Sketches something of this "seedy" side of the early years of the century, because, for good or evil, the neighbourhood of Royston was ...
— Fragments of Two Centuries - Glimpses of Country Life when George III. was King • Alfred Kingston

... spoon dull? Fishy were his eyes; torpedinous was his manner; and his main idea, out of two which he really had, related to the moon—from which you infer, perhaps, that he was lunatic. By no means. It was no craze, under the influence of the moon, which possessed him; it was an idea of mere hostility to the moon. The Madras people, like many others, had an idea that she influenced the weather. Subsequently the Herschels, senior and junior, systematized this idea; and then the wrath of ...
— Narrative And Miscellaneous Papers • Thomas De Quincey

... had had a craze for things that worked silently and easily. Bullard lifted the heavy sash with scarce ...
— Till the Clock Stops • John Joy Bell

... bone that had been buried, which God would some day dig up. Sometimes, in his caninomorphic conception of deity, he felt near him the thunder of those mighty paws. In rare moments of silence he gazed from his office window upon the sun-gilded, tempting city. Her madness was upon him—her splendid craze of haste, ambition, pride. Yet he wondered. This God he needed, this liberating horizon, was it after all in the cleverest of hiding-places—in himself? Was it ...
— Where the Blue Begins • Christopher Morley

... result—a dwarf. If the thyroid gland was at fault we would have either the low mentality commonly spoken of as cretinism, or myxedema. We found that by feeding children the fresh gland substance a marked improvement would be obtained and sometimes a cure. Some years ago there was a surgical craze which called for the removal of the women's ovaries. It was thought that many nervous troubles, including epilepsy, etc., were due to diseased ovaries, so the surgeons removed ovaries just about as promiscuously ...
— The Goat-gland Transplantation • Sydney B. Flower


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