hysterics

[ US /ˌhɪsˈtɛɹɪks/ ]
[ UK /hɪstˈɛɹɪks/ ]
NOUN
  1. an attack of hysteria
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How To Use hysterics In A Sentence

  • Fundamental in the personality of the hysterics is this instability, this emotionality, which is however secondary to an egotistic, easily wounded nature, craving sympathy and respect and often unable legitimately to earn them. The Nervous Housewife
  • I spent an hour recently trying to explain limericks to a Chinese from Tientsin; which left him bewildered, me frustrated, and the staff of the bar we were in, in hysterics.
  • Going into that conversation I tended to view all the big pushers of regime change as warmongers, hysterics or trouble-makers.
  • Lopez is completely inept when it comes to playing out the hysterics that this mellow-dramatic insipid thriller so often demands of her.
  • Again: why should I take these hysterics seriously?
  • But eventually it made it to Canada, where my teenaged friends and I would watch it in total hysterics after school.
  • The site also has a video clip of Big Daddy and Hit Girl hysterics from the upcoming movie too. Kick-Ass Big Daddy revealed | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News
  • Mr. Coughlin laughed about it the next day, and Thursday, when Mr. Cofield sported a bright blue shirt that read, "Don 't Tase Me, Bro," Mr. Canty broke into hysterics. In Stuffing the Run,
  • Sadly for Burnside, such hysterics are less impressive when introduced by a diarist who lacks the wit to spell check her ‘murmour’ ed offerings.
  • `I will not have hysterics ," she adjured herself, heading for the phone. DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION
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