We have no meanings for "new craze" in our records yet.
1 I am lunching to-day with Nancy Smallwood, who has a new craze .
2 Two years ago a wave of interest surrounded a new craze called Bluejacking.
3 We're talking about the new craze of colouring-in books for adults.
4 As Vane had said in his letter, Nancy Smallwood had a new craze .
5 At lessons, she discovered that Theresa and her friends had started a new craze .
6 A new craze took Western nations by storm as "falsies" were introduced.
7 He will have none of your new craze for Gothic.
8 Barry McCall looks at the new craze Readers of a certain age will remember Johnny Cash.
9 Viognier was going to be the new craze , the hip drink, we heard a few years ago.
10 And the new craze will only keep spreading, as IM becomes available on pagers, televisions, and handhelds.
11 But 'tis this new craze of hers!
12 He kickstarted a new craze for merchandising that continues today, when children clamoured to own their own Muffin.
13 Cuba has been swept by a new craze - the red, white and blue of the UK's flag.
14 To their surprise, hundreds and even thousands of ordinary citizens were curious about this new craze , the professional golf match.
15 SuperCoach racing expert Tim Williams has joined the tens of thousands of fans saddling up for the new craze at supercoach.com.au.
16 Latinism, like every new craze , became a passion, and ran through the less intelligent kinds of writing in a wild excess.
Other examples for "new craze"
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This collocation consists of: New craze through the time
New craze across language varieties