mania
21mania — index compulsion (obsession), furor, lunacy, market (demand), obsession, paranoia, passion …
22Mania — f Polish: pet form of MARIA (SEE Maria). Variant: Maniuta …
23-mania — {{hw}}{{ mania}}{{/hw}} secondo elemento: in parole composte spec. della terminologia medica, indica passione spiccata, eccessiva (bibliomania, grafomania) o bisogno eccessivo o patologico (cleptomania, tossicomania) …
24-mania — [ meıniə ] suffix 1. ) used with many nouns to make nouns meaning an extremely strong enthusiasm for something: Beatlemania 2. ) used for making nouns describing a particular type of mental illness: kleptomania (=a mental illness that makes you… …
25mania — s. f. 1. Aferro a uma ideia fixa. 2. [Por extensão] Capricho, teima. 3. Desejo imoderado …
26mania — manià sf. (2, 4) supratimas, nuovoka: Kurs mãnios, proto nebturi, tas begalvis JI199. Ans be jokios maniõs, t. y. nieko nesumano J …
27-mania — The rapid turnover of occasional and ephemeral words formed with this suffix was noted by the OED and has continued with forms such as Beatlemania, technomania (from 1969), and Pottermania (the mass appeal of books about Harry Potter by J. K.… …
28mania — [n] fixation, madness aberration, ax to grind*, bee*, bee in bonnet*, bug*, bug in ear*, compulsion, craving, craze, craziness, delirium, dementia, derangement, desire, disorder, enthusiasm, fad, fancy, fascination, fetish, fixed idea, frenzy,… …
29-mania — ► COMBINING FORM 1) referring to a specified type of mental abnormality or obsession: kleptomania. 2) denoting extreme enthusiasm or admiration: bibliomania. DERIVATIVES maniac combining form …
30mania — ► NOUN 1) mental illness marked by periods of excitement, delusions, and overactivity. 2) an obsession. ORIGIN Greek, madness …