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 craze [kreiz]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 狂热, 大流行

vt. (使)发狂, (使)开裂

vi. (使)发狂, (使)开裂

[化] 银纹(高聚物制品缺陷)


  1. The boys had a craze for collecting stamps.
    那些男孩子们热衷于集邮。
  2. Shops cater for the do-it- yourself craze by offering consumers bits and pieces which they can assemble at home.
    商店为了迎合“自己动手”的狂热心理,为消费者提供可以在家里组装的零件。
  3. He is craze about Craze English.
    他对疯狂英语很着迷。


craze
[ noun ]
  1. an interest followed with exaggerated zeal

  2. <noun.cognition>
    he always follows the latest fads
    it was all the rage that season
  3. state of violent mental agitation

  4. <noun.state>
  5. a fine crack in a glaze or other surface

  6. <noun.attribute>
[ verb ]
  1. cause to go crazy; cause to lose one's mind

  2. <verb.emotion> madden
  3. develop a fine network of cracks

  4. <verb.change>
    Crazed ceramics


Craze \Craze\, v. i.
1. To be crazed, or to act or appear as one that is crazed;
to rave; to become insane.

She would weep and he would craze. --Keats.

2. To crack, as the glazing of porcelain or pottery.


Craze \Craze\, n.
1. Craziness; insanity.

2. A strong habitual desire or fancy; a crotchet.

It was quite a craze with him [Burns] to have his
Jean dressed genteelly. --Prof.
Wilson.

3. A temporary passion or infatuation, as for same new
amusement, pursuit, or fashion; a fad; as, the bric-a-brac
craze; the [ae]sthetic craze.

Various crazes concerning health and disease. --W.
Pater.

4. (Ceramics) A crack in the glaze or enamel such as is
caused by exposure of the pottery to great or irregular
heat.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]


Craze \Craze\ (kr[=a]z), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Crazed}
(kr[=a]zd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Crazing}.] [OE. crasen to break,
fr. Scand., perh. through OF.; cf. Sw. krasa to crackle,
sl[*a] i kras, to break to pieces, F. ['e]craser to crush,
fr. the Scand. Cf. {Crash}.]
1. To break into pieces; to crush; to grind to powder. See
{Crase}.

God, looking forth, will trouble all his host, And
craze their chariot wheels. --Milton.

2. To weaken; to impair; to render decrepit. [Obs.]

Till length of years,
And sedentary numbness, craze my limbs. --Milton.

3. To derange the intellect of; to render insane.

Any man . . . that is crazed and out of his wits.
--Tilloston.

Grief hath crazed my wits. --Shak.

  1. Some sellers are companies that went private in the leveraged buy-out craze of the early '80s and are under pressure to sell the company again so that investors can get their cash out.
  2. But excited board room speculation that classical music could be the much-needed new musical craze were soon scuppered by sales figures.
  3. But the female fitness craze has arrived, and among gulf women it is just beginning to hit its stride.
  4. Mr. Goldfeder insisted that underlings focus on detailed long-range planning, which often has diverted them from the craze for the latest fashion fad or a rival's merchandising ploy.
  5. The Cajun craze has done more for blackened fish, chicken and meat than for traditional Louisiana-style boiled crawfish, Murff said.
  6. He, his dad and sister, Amy Wallace, later produced The Book of Lists, which included such gems as "15 Famous Events That Happened in the Bathtub" and inspired the continuing list-making craze.
  7. Pants, which competed with the mini craze this winter, continue their popularity for spring and summer.
  8. While the cellular craze has already lifted shares of telephone companies, they may be a safer way to play cellular.
  9. State officials have outlawed plastic duck races as a threat to the environment, sending the latest craze in fund raising in Rhode Island up the creek.
  10. You're starring in `Star Wars!' "I've used that advice all through the Freddy craze, and it's really kept me focused.
  11. Hoping to cash in on the craze, the Palladium offers free lambada lessons, a floor show and a lambada dance contest.
  12. The dolls accounted for sales of $67 million when introduced quietly in 1983 but skyrocketed during a national craze that boosted sales to $540 million in 1984 and a peak of $600 million in 1985.
  13. In addition, the postal service will produce a stamp booklet featuring historical steamboats, and will jump into the current children's craze over dinosaurs with a block of four stamps featuring the ancient reptiles.
  14. Daytime and cocktail hour hemlines remained an inch or two above the knee, unlike the ready-to-wear lengths for this year's warmer season which fell dramatically below the knee after the latest mini skirt craze.
  15. "We are in the middle of an oat bran craze in this country that was primarily started and prompted by Quaker in order to sell its products," Attorney General Jim Mattox said at a news conference.
  16. The latest craze is for lenders to toss billions of dollars at corporate raiders of some of America's biggest companies.
  17. The company is the sole contractor for Dorfman Pacific, the Stockton, Calif., firm that owns the license for Dick Tracy hats, and Bollman hopes they become a fashion craze.
  18. If that sounds appealing, get in line, because sports psychoanalysis is booming among psychologists, psychiatrists and others aiming to tap the lucrative health-and-fitness craze.
  19. "Oba Oba '90," a new edition of the Brazilian musical revue, this time featuring the latest dance craze, the lambada.
  20. The craze for the costume jewellery of certain distinguished houses started in the US, but in the last few years it has spread to this country.
  21. Kirin Brewery Co. has responded shrewdly to the recent craze for imported premium beers by developing Heartland Beer, a brew so heavy with the flavor of hops it would make a Pennsylvania steelworker proud.
  22. The gambling craze is attributed to the flood of idle cash created by Taiwan's economic success and of limited investment opportunities.
  23. But it all fell apart as the energy craze slowed, and the stock tanked to 11 last year.
  24. Besides technology, the craze has had a prod from capitalism.
  25. The folks at Oldsmobile aren't shy about saying they're going after buyers of Chrysler's popular minivans, the Plymouth Voyager and Dodge Caravan, which started the minivan craze early this decade.
  26. The fitness craze itself has gone soft, the survey found.
  27. The diaspora craze is so pervasive that in September a consulting agency for potential emigrators opened its offices at the fancy Alvear Palace Hotel.
  28. A craze for 'designer pets' such as pythons, pot-bellied pigs and even sheep is boosting animal cruelty to record levels, the RSPCA said.
  29. The craze for chronographs - watches which incorporate stop watches -continues, but this fashion may have peaked.
  30. Love affairs for Carlos are as intense, and short-lived, as the latest dance craze.
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