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[ UK /lˈuːnəsi/ ]
[ US /ˈɫunəsi/ ]
NOUN
  1. foolish or senseless behavior
  2. obsolete terms for legal insanity

How To Use lunacy In A Sentence

  • Obviously, the title of ‘best restaurant in the world’ is subjective to the point of lunacy.
  • As long as they remain on sale, another bloodbath is just one act of lunacy away. The Sun
  • So bad, in fact, that she walks a fine line between love and lunacy. Times, Sunday Times
  • It would be lunacy to try to climb the mountain in this weather.
  • Since we share a common border, I certainly hope that lunacy is not contagious! Landrieu to support health care reform bill
  • In the latest bit of right-wing lunacy on health care reform, RedState. com writer "hogan" brazenly compares health care reform bills to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 -- inanely adding that if health care reform passes, you can "say goodbye to freedom. AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed
  • The 2009 robotics competition, dubbed "Lunacy," required designing and building robots that would ally with others to collect balls ("moon rocks") on a slippery ("moonlike") surface. Celebrity Geeks
  • For Australia, a country with the most competitive coal industry in the world, this is economic lunacy.
  • He that says that the doctor's skill is wanted in the case of a slight skin-eruption or whitlow, but is not needed in the case of pleurisy, fever, or lunacy, in what respect does he differ from the man that says that schools and teaching and precepts are only for small and boyish duties, while great and important matters are to be left to mere routine and accident? Plutarch's Morals
  • He was an up-and-coming comic then, a strange androgynous mix of lunacy and manic energy.
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