a combining form of mania ( megalomania ); extended to mean “enthusiasm, often of an extreme and transient nature,” for that specified by the initial element ( bibliomania ).
a mental disorder characterized by great excitement and occasionally violent behaviour See also manic-depressive
an obsessional enthusiasm or partiality a mania for mushroomsindicating extreme desire or pleasure of a specified kind or an abnormal excitement aroused by something
kleptomania pyromania nymphomaniaViolent, abnormal, or impulsive behavior. In psychological terms, mania is wild activity associated with manic depression.
Discover MoreFirst recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English, from Latin, from Greek manía “madness”; akin to maenad, mind
Discover MoreMariachis provided the soundtrack as the City went mad with Fernando-mania.
Hours after these reports, one of which I published, the mania was in full swing.
Given the hoops mania, though, the gym is the largest in the state, capable of holding 3,000-plus rabid fans.
If you want to predict trends in America, whether in politics or products, World Cup mania should serve as a wake-up call.
The more important smell test is one of tone: that cocktail of cleverness, warmth, and mania that marked the Henson years.
This mania for correction shows itself too in relation to the authorities themselves.
Of the railway mania period I have spoken in a previous chapter.
The very next day he burst in upon me in a state of bliss bordering on mania.
When one considers a phenomenon of such range and intensity, it does not suffice to employ words like infatuation, fashion, mania.
At this period in his life it was a kind of mania to declare himself quite incapable in certain branches of his art.