[
UK
/kɹˈeɪzɪli/
]
[ US /ˈkɹeɪzəɫi/ ]
[ US /ˈkɹeɪzəɫi/ ]
ADVERB
-
in an insane manner
the witch cackled madly
screaming dementedly
he behaves crazily when he is off his medication
she behaved insanely
How To Use crazily In A Sentence
- Suddenly an Army jeep appeared from around the bend, speeding crazily through the peaceful crowd.
- On Sule Pagoda Road, there is a bizarre three-story building that would have made Wren wake up screaming: mullioned windows, crazily framed and blacked out, lozenge-shaped openings in crenellated towers, red battlements. Burma
- We climbed over the craggy outcrops of Cambro-Ordovician age Fort Burnside Formation and Jamestown Formation, crazily tilted beds of phyllite and slate and siltstone and stark white veins of calcite. "Into a light that lingers."
- It was like some kind of crazily dangerous child's game.
- He laughed crazily.
- The hard working police are severely underfunded, significantly underpaid and crazily understaffed.
- Or you might loop around crazily a few times, like a spirograph on meth. Mark Morford: Why Are You Always Walking in Circles?
- And anyway, by the late ’70s, Mr. Hockney had detoured in a half-dozen directions: theater sets and costume design, where the artist showed himself to be a virtuoso; photography, where he did not; and farragoes into Cubist collage, Chinese philosophy and “fax” drawings, as well as the artist’s crazily overpublicized theory that from the Renaissance onward, artists used optical devices to paint in perfect one-point perspective. The Unconfounding Delight of David Hockney
- Her thoughts, her inner self, veered crazily between extremes. LOST SUMMER
- Beryl wrote her name mechanically in letters that zigzagged crazily. Red-Robin