lunatics in English

noun
1
a mentally ill person (not in technical use).
She continued to gape at him as if he was a runaway lunatic from a nearby mental asylum.

Use "lunatics" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "lunatics" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "lunatics", or refer to the context using the word "lunatics" in the English Dictionary.

1. The lunatics are running this asylum.

2. We can't have these lunatics on the loose with their goddamned explosives.

3. They move about listlessly and apparently without much purpose; they might just as well be lunatics.

4. Suspicion points to Osama bin Laden, but there are other possibilities, including, just conceivably , home - grown lunatics.

5. “Antipsychiatrisme” has periodically been felt in Germany and even more occurs time and again, as in the case of amuck running of lunatics.

6. Nor would you, or, rather, should you, accept the ravings and writhings and Agonized contortions of those two lunatics to-night as a convincing portrayal of love

7. Ailments (4 Occurrences) Matthew 4:24 and his fame went forth to all Syria, and they brought to him all having Ailments, pressed with manifold sicknesses and pains, and demoniacs, and lunatics, and paralytics, and he healed them

8. His second wife was fellow star Mary Pickford and in 1919 they joined Chaplin and DW Griffith in creating United Artists, giving rise to the quip that "the lunatics have taken over the asylum"

9. A gordian knot! By David Weston September 29, 2020 2020, Africa, Foreign Policy, sudan, terrorism, The Weekly, Uncategorized, United Nations “Children and lunatics cut the Gordian Knot which the poet spends his life patiently trying to untie— Jean Cocteau “Sudan is not Arab enough for Arabs and not African enough for Africans.”

10. ‘Theorists in the first period included travelers, military physicians, and Alienists who examined Algerian lunatics and collectively found them less prone to madness than civilized Europeans.’ ‘On this side were the ex-physician to the viceroy of Egypt, Franz Pruner-Bey, the former Martinique physician Etienne Rufz de Lavison, and the

11. Sceptics and prejudiced or interested witnesses in general may scoff as they like , the fact cannot be gainsaid . Our friendsand we have some who regard us neither as lunatics nor imposterswill at least be glad to read the statement which follows ; . . . We are no . more at liberty to repeat here all the questions put to us by the interviewers than we are to divulge certain other facts which would still more strongly corroborate our repeated assertions ( hat ( 1 ) Our Society was founded at the direct suggestion of Indian and Tibetan Adepts ; and ( 2 ) that in coming to this country we but obeyed their wishes .