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[ UK /hˈɛktɪk/ ]
[ US /ˈhɛktɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. marked by intense agitation or emotion
    worked at a feverish pace

How To Use hectic In A Sentence

  • Such football titbits always float to the surface on third-round day which remains the best, most hectic, interesting and fun day of the season - and this one was even more frenetic than usual.
  • Both neo-colonial and advanced capitalist/colonial states organize and reinforce a cathectic structure based in sexual difference, which they enforce through a variety of means, including legislation.
  • Sadly, because we found our wine so late, and things have been hectic with a sick 9-month old here at the LENNDEVOURS world headquarters there wasn't time for a full-fledge review, meaning that I didn't taste it blind or even pull my notebook out. Wine Blogging Wednesday
  • I am a highly educated, successful career woman who finally realized that we women are getting ripped off by the current culture and the educational establishment who is brainwashing us into a life of hectic, unfulfilling work in stuffy cubicles working long, stressful hours to earn enough so that we can "relax" on a beach somewhere. Get in on Life...
  • I think mainly in the realm of film, if something is too hectically edited. "If there really was a God here, he'd have raised a hand by now."
  • We also balanced out the hectic days with more leisurely moments. Times, Sunday Times
  • He uses hectic fever as an analogy - as hectic fever is to the body, political maladies are to a state.
  • Pals blamed hectic work schedules for end of their relationship. The Sun
  • His schedule has become increasingly hectic as he juggles his role as a search and rescue pilot with royal duties. The Sun
  • I had to coordinate my hectic schedule with a wide variety of shuls located in various parts of the metropolis and match it with their schedules.
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