Affected with or marked by frenzy or mania uncontrolled by reason.
1Assessment: Bipolar 1 disorder, current episode manic, severe, with psychotic features; PTSD.
2Therefore, this population should be carefully investigated for manic and hypomanic symptoms.
3That's a chemical problem, you'd say to yourself, manic-depression, Lithium, all that.
4Doc said he was probably in something called an acutely manic period.
5At one point I'd been diagnosed as either bi-polar or manic depressive.
6Then comes Chips' accident, and his retreat into childhood and manic insecurity.
7There was a rather manic enthusiasm about everyone I met that day.
8Those with type I experience periods of manic highs and depressive lows.
9Then there's the manic nastiness of so many of his animal creations.
10Then with a manic change of speed, I took off after Perez.
11The plan is either motivated by manic obsession or by unforgivable cynicism.
12Bob can be rather unreasonable in his persistence, actually manic about it.
13That struck me as hilarious-ina manic, high-pitchedlaughing kind of way.
14This has been an extraordinary experience, your grace. The manic smile returned.
15The Kekovich series is about manic energy, but the jolliness was brittle.
16He carries those years like fuel in a jetpack of manic motivation.
Manic nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América