Intensely enthusiastic about or preoccupied with.
Mentally or physically infirm with age.
Israeli variant of dodgeball.
Sinònims
Examples for "ga-ga"
Examples for "ga-ga"
1Six months of this had me slightly ga-ga and I wanted out.
2How could I discuss our survival with Stein if I couldn't even say goo-goo-ga-ga?
3Wa-wa-we'll ga-ga-get the wa-wine and ga-go to ya-your pa-pa-place.
4Then again, RTE's entertainment moguls generally go ga-ga for lowest common denominator interactivity of this sort.
5As for the others, the General's ga-ga, I think, and old Wargrave's forte is masterly inactivity.
1Consumers aren't going as gaga for Google TV as manufacturers had hoped.
2Any literature lover will go gaga over any one of these, trust.
3Maybe she thinks she wants this only because you're so gaga about it.
4The crowd go fittingly gaga -this feels like a band going places.
5In July, you went completely gaga for the benefits of singing to babies.
6She had always been a gut-level skeptic about the gaga-ness around her husband.
7As US markets raced higher in January, ordinary investors were going gaga for stocks.
8Fifty years ago, everyone was gaga over the atomic bomb.
9It was time to go gaga girl reporter, an easy role to slip into.
10The people who idolise Ronald Reagan now that they're no longer gaga for George?
11Not hard to see why all the girls are gaga over them, is it?
12Swedish band, Dirty Loops made the younger festino's go gaga.
13And probably no surprise to anyone: The American people are gaga for this travel-related ban.
14Something about this chocolate bar, made in Dunedin, New Zealand, is making people go gaga.
15Of COURSE gaga wants to play mermaid again….. Pffft.
16Rainwater's uncle had gone gaga over Snook's fishbowl liner.