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  1. Mar 16, 2017 · What's the difference between Crazy for, crazy about and crazy over? I just assume that crazy for or about something/someone means to love it. • I'm crazy...

  2. Sep 10, 2006 · Sep 11, 2006. #6. I agree with ChiMike that. "crazy for.." indicates an immediate desire which badly needs to be met, and that. "crazy about" indicates a more general state of infatuation. I also agree with renegade angel that the difference between "crazy for" and "crazy about" is not like the difference between "really want" and "really like".

  3. Dec 10, 2006 · You can say I am going crazy. English speakers generally do not say "I am getting crazy." It isn't gramatically wrong, it just isn't said that way. You could, however, refer to a situation in that way. For example you could say "We have so much left to do on this project, work is getting crazy." If you wish to refer to yourself, you would say "I am going crazy."

  4. Sep 7, 2004 · Mad and crazy are more or less interchangeable when used in the sense of being demented, furious or enthusiastic. Insane would be used in the sense of demented, and is considered more as an illness, although you can also describe an idea as being insane, for example. Hope it helps. salu2. la de los ojos azules.

  5. May 6, 2013 · Hello! Could you please tell me whether crazed and crazy are alterable in the following quoted text I excerpted from a report? Is there any difference between the words? Justin Bieber’s second date with Dubai took an unexpected turn when a crazed fan stormed the singer on stage mid performance...

  6. May 16, 2015 · The word crazy can be used in positive way?.For example, I am crazy for eating ice cream. is this correct sentence?

  7. Jun 3, 2024 · It is idiomatic to say "That's crazy!" about someone else's experience, in particular in response to a story someone tells you. "This is crazy!" would only be said about something YOU are doing or seeing right now. Someone might have sent you an email with a ridiculous idea or story.

  8. Nov 4, 2015 · Hello. I think these two words, "crazed" and "crazy" are pretty much the same, right? Can someone tell me how exactly they are different? Like, when do you use one but not the other and the reverse. Thanks. Context 1. In one episode of The Simpsons, Bill Gates was featured. He was...

  9. Feb 16, 2018 · Am I — or are the others crazy? Albert Einstein: a documentary biography, Carl Seelig (1956), p. 194. You will note that Einstein died in 1955. There is a tradition of attributing quotes to various famous people in order to make the saying sound wiser or more humorous than it is.

  10. Oct 23, 2005 · Crazy-ass (note the hypen) written in this form is a modern slang expression to mean a number of things - predominantly that something is good, possibly unique in some way, or unexpectedly different.

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