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mad


11 definitions found

mad - Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 :

  Mad \Mad\, v. i.
     To be mad; to go mad; to rave. See Madding. [Archaic]
     --Chaucer.
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           Festus said with great voice, Paul thou maddest.
                                                    --Wyclif
                                                    (Acts).
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  Mad \Mad\, n. [AS. ma?a; akin to D. & G. made, Goth. mapa, and
     prob. to E. moth.] (Zool.)
     An earthworm. [Written also made.]
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  Mad \Mad\, obs.
     p. p. of Made. --Chaucer.
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  Mad \Mad\, a. [Compar. Madder; superl. Maddest.] [AS. gem?d,
     gem[=a]d, mad; akin to OS. gem?d foolish, OHG. gameit, Icel.
     mei?a to hurt, Goth. gam['a]ids weak, broken. ?.]
     1. Disordered in intellect; crazy; insane.
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              I have heard my grandsire say full oft,
              Extremity of griefs would make men mad. --Shak.
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     2. Excited beyond self-control or the restraint of reason;
        inflamed by violent or uncontrollable desire, passion, or
        appetite; as, to be mad with terror, lust, or hatred; mad
        against political reform.
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              It is the land of graven images, and they are mad
              upon their idols.                     --Jer. 1. 88.
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              And being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted
              them even unto strange cities.        --Acts xxvi.
                                                    11.
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     3. Proceeding from, or indicating, madness; expressing
        distraction; prompted by infatuation, fury, or extreme
        rashness. "Mad demeanor." --Milton.
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              Mad wars destroy in one year the works of many years
              of peace.                             --Franklin.
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              The mad promise of Cleon was fulfilled. --Jowett
                                                    (Thucyd.).
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     4. Extravagant; immoderate. "Be mad and merry." --Shak.
        "Fetching mad bounds." --Shak.
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     5. Furious with rage, terror, or disease; -- said of the
        lower animals; as, a mad bull; esp., having hydrophobia;
        rabid; as, a mad dog.
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     6. Angry; out of patience; vexed; as, to get mad at a person.
        [Colloq.]
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     7. Having impaired polarity; -- applied to a compass needle.
        [Colloq.]
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     Like mad, like a mad person; in a furious manner; as, to
        run like mad. --L'Estrange.
  
     To run mad.
        (a) To become wild with excitement.
        (b) To run wildly about under the influence of
            hydrophobia; to become affected with hydrophobia.
  
     To run mad after, to pursue under the influence of
        infatuation or immoderate desire. "The world is running
        mad after farce." --Dryden.
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  Mad \Mad\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Madded; p. pr. & vb. n.
     Madding.]
     To make mad or furious; to madden.
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           Had I but seen thy picture in this plight,
           It would have madded me.                 --Shak.
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mad - WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) :

  mad
      adj 1: roused to anger; "stayed huffy a good while"- Mark Twain;
             "she gets mad when you wake her up so early"; "mad at his
             friend"; "sore over a remark" [syn: huffy, mad,
             sore]
      2: affected with madness or insanity; "a man who had gone mad"
         [syn: brainsick, crazy, demented, disturbed, mad,
         sick, unbalanced, unhinged]
      3: marked by uncontrolled excitement or emotion; "a crowd of
         delirious baseball fans"; "something frantic in their
         gaiety"; "a mad whirl of pleasure" [syn: delirious,
         excited, frantic, mad, unrestrained]
      4: very foolish; "harebrained ideas"; "took insane risks behind
         the wheel"; "a completely mad scheme to build a bridge
         between two mountains" [syn: harebrained, insane, mad]

mad - Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (26 May 2007) :

  MAD
  
     <language> 1. Michigan Algorithm Decoder.
  
     2. A data flow language.
  
     ["Implementation of Data Structures on a Data Flow Computer",
     D.L. Bowen, Ph.D. Thesis, Victoria U Manchester, Apr 1981].
  
     (1999-12-10)
  

mad - V.E.R.A. -- Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms (June 2006) :

  MAD
         Memory Address Driver strength (BIOS)
         

  MAD
         Militaerischer AbschirmDienst (mil., org.)
         

  MAD
         Message Address Directory
         

mad - Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 :

  318 Moby Thesaurus words for "mad":
     Dionysiac, a transient madness, abandoned, abnormal, absurd,
     accident-prone, acrimonious, affronted, amok, anarchic, anger,
     angered, angriness, angry, apish, ardent, ardently, asinine, avid,
     bacchic, balmy, bananas, barmy, batty, befooled, beguiled,
     bellowing, bereft of reason, berserk, besotted, blustering,
     blusterous, blustery, bonkers, brainless, brainsick, breakneck,
     browned-off, buffoonish, bughouse, bugs, careless, carried away,
     certifiable, chaotic, childish, choleric, cockeyed, corybantic,
     crackbrained, cracked, crackers, craze, crazed, crazy, credulous,
     cross, cuckoo, daffy, daft, dazed, delirious, deluded, dement,
     demented, demoniac, deprived of reason, derange, deranged,
     desperate, desperately, devil-may-care, disoriented, distract,
     distracted, distraught, dizzy, doting, dotty, drive insane,
     drive mad, dumb, eager, ecstatic, enrage, enraged, enragement,
     enraptured, enthusiastic, enthusiastically, exasperated, excitedly,
     extravagant, fallacious, fanatical, fantastic, fatuitous, fatuous,
     feral, ferocious, fervent, fervently, fervid, feverishly, fierce,
     flaky, flighty, fond, fool, foolhardy, foolheaded, foolish,
     frantic, frenetic, frenzied, frenziedly, frenzy, fuddled,
     fulminating, fuming, furious, furiously, fury, futile, gaga, goofy,
     grapes of wrath, gulled, haggard, hallucinated, harum-scarum,
     hasty, headlong, heat, heated, heedless, hellish, hog-wild, hooked,
     hotheaded, howling, hurried, hysterical, hysterically, idiotic,
     ill-advised, ill-considered, imbecile, immature, impetuous,
     imprudent, in a transport, in hysterics, inane, incense, incensed,
     indignant, indiscreet, inept, infatuated, infuriate, infuriated,
     infuriation, insane, insensate, intoxicated, invalid, irate,
     irateness, ire, ireful, irrational, irritated, keen, kooky,
     like crazy, like mad, like one possessed, livid, loco, loony,
     loopy, lunatic, madcap, madden, maddened, madding, madly, maenadic,
     make mad, maniac, maniacal, manic, maudlin, mazed, mental,
     mentally deficient, mentally ill, meshuggah, mindless, moon-struck,
     moronic, non compos, non compos mentis, nonrational, nonsensical,
     not all there, not right, nuts, nutty, odd, of unsound mind, off,
     offended, orgasmic, orgastic, orgiastic, outraged, overeager,
     overenthusiastic, overzealous, pandemoniac, passionate, pissed,
     pissed-off, possessed, potty, precipitant, precipitate,
     precipitous, preposterous, provoked, psycho, psychotic, puerile,
     queer, rabid, rage, raging, ramping, ranting, rash, ravening,
     raving, raving mad, ravished, reasonless, reckless, riled up,
     rip-roaring, roaring, round the bend, running mad, running wild,
     saeva indignatio, sappy, screwy, send mad, senseless, sentimental,
     shatter, sick, silly, slap-bang, slapdash, sophistic, sore,
     soreness, stark-mad, stark-raving mad, stark-staring mad, storming,
     stormy, strange, stupid, tempestuous, tetched, thoughtless,
     ticked off, touched, transported, troublous, tumultuous, turbulent,
     twisted, umbrage, unbalance, unbalanced, uncontrollable, unhinge,
     unhinged, unreasonable, unsane, unsettled, unsound, unwise,
     uproarious, vials of wrath, violent, violently, wacky, wandering,
     wanton, waxy, wet, wild, wild-eyed, wild-looking, wildly, witless,
     worked up, wrath, wrathful, wrathfulness, wrathy, wroth,
     wrought-up, zealous