hysteric

[ US /ˌhɪsˈtɛɹɪk/ ]
[ UK /hɪstˈɛɹɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. characterized by or arising from psychoneurotic hysteria
    during hysterical conditions various functions of the human body are disordered
    hysterical amnesia
NOUN
  1. a person suffering from hysteria
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How To Use hysteric In A Sentence

  • And a very certain opposition as well: some of it sensible, a good deal of it plain hysterical. Times, Sunday Times
  • He goes hysterical when I even wash his face in the bath, and if water gets in his hair it is even worse.
  • From the Rushmorean cover portrait of Bush (which over the headline 'An American Revolutionary' was such a brazen and transparent effort to recall George Washington that it was embarrassing) to the 'Why We Fight' black-and-white portraiture of the aggrieved president sitting somberly at the bedside of the war-wounded, this issue is positively hysterical in its iconolatry. "What kind of a maniac puts eagles in a Christmas tree?": James Wolcott
  • Mr Morgan and his organ releasing them into hysterical laughter had anaesthetized the horror of the past.
  • Chatting in their usual rapid-fire mix of Czech and Slovak -- a sound that assistant coach Tim Hunter once described as "three guys trying to drown: blub-blub-blub" -- the trio suddenly broke into hysterical laughter. From the archives: Skating through life
  • The small minority of motorcycle riders that are involved in criminal activity should be able to be dealt with under existing laws against organised (or other) crime, we don't need more laws specifically targeting motorbike riders, or hysterical public discussion, about "bikie" terror. Central Midlands & Coastal Advocate
  • No less powerfully mythopoetic than the classical image of the disease, the demonological model envisioned the hysterical anesthesias, mutisms, and convulsions as stigmati diaboli or marks of the devil.
  • Crikey readers have contributed a lot of stories on circulation rorts, fiddles and the like over the past week or so, but here's another tale, a bit historical, which would be hysterical if it wasn't serious.
  • It could be a hypocoristic or baby-talk form of hysterical, or it might be from the imitative word hiss; or perhaps it is a variant of another dialect term, jesse, meaning a ` severe scolding, 'which is probably from a Biblical allusion. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIX No 1
  • Driven by hysterical choirs and crashing percussion, the Latin liturgy is indeed rather scary.
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