Maniacs

/ˈmeɪ.ni.æks/ noun

Definition

People who are wildly crazy or dangerously obsessed with something.

Etymology

From Greek 'mania' meaning 'madness or frenzy,' combined with the Latin suffix -ac. The word originally referred to people experiencing extreme mental disturbance, but evolved to describe anyone acting with wild intensity or obsession.

Kelly Says

The word 'mania' is so powerful that it appears in psychiatric terms like 'bipolar disorder,' and even in modern slang like 'choco-holic'—it's one of the most borrowed medical words in everyday language.

Translations

AMአማርኛ
አንድ እንደ ሰው
an-d en-de se-w
ARالعربية
مجنونون
mu-j-no-nun
BNবাংলা
মানিক
ma-ni-k
CACatalà
maniacs
ma-ni-aks
CSČeština
maniaci
ma-ni-a-ci
DADansk
maniak
ma-ni-ak
DEDeutsch
Maniacs
ma-ni-aks
ELΕλληνικά
μανιacs
ma-ni-acs
ESEspañol
maniáticos
ma-ni-a-ti-kos
FAفارسی
جنون
je-no-n
FISuomi
hulluja
hullu-ju
FRFrançais
maniacs
ma-ni-aks
GUGU
મનહી
ma-n-hee
HAHA
magan
ma-gan
HEעברית
משוגעים
mi-sho-ge-im
HIहिन्दी
पागल
pa-gal
HUMagyar
mániai
ma-n-i-a-i
IDBahasa Indonesia
orang gila
o-rang gi-la
IGIG
n'eme
n'e-me
ITItaliano
maniaci
ma-ni-a-chi
JA日本語
狂人
kyo-jin
KKKK
манія
ma-ni-ya
KMKM
មានជំនាញ
ma-an je-m-na-j
KO한국어
광기자
gwang-gi-ja
MRMR
माना
ma-na
MSBahasa Melayu
orang gila
o-rang gi-la
MYမြန်မာ
ကြောက်
kya-uk
NLNederlands
maniakken
ma-ni-a-kken
NONorsk
maniak
ma-ni-ak
PAPA
ਪਾਗਲ
pa-gal
PLPolski
maniacy
ma-nia-cy
PTPortuguês
maniáticos
ma-ni-a-ti-kos
RORomână
maniaci
ma-ni-a-ci
RUРусский
маниаки
ma-ni-a-ki
SVSvenska
maniak
ma-ni-ak
SWKiswahili
maniacs
ma-ni-aks
TAதமிழ்
சந்திரன்கள்
san-thira-na-kkal
TEతెలుగు
వేటాడేవారు
ve-ta-a-de-va-ru
THไทย
คลั่ง
klang
TLTL
maniak
ma-ni-ak
TRTürkçe
deliler
de-li-ler
UKУкраїнська
маніаки
ma-ni-a-ki
URاردو
جنون
je-no-n
VITiếng Việt
điên cuồng
đi-ên-cu-ồng
YOYO
àgbà
a-g-ba
ZH中文
疯子
fēngzi
ZUZU
uyalala
u-ya-la-la

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Historically, 'maniac' and similar terms (maniacal woman, madwoman) were gendered diagnoses used to pathologize female anger, independence, and sexuality, particularly through forced institutionalization and medical control.

Inclusive Usage

Avoid when discussing individuals; use 'person experiencing mental health crisis,' 'dangerous individual,' or 'person with obsessive tendencies.' Reserve for extreme fictional/hyperbolic contexts with care.

Inclusive Alternatives

["people with obsessive patterns","dangerous individuals","erratic behavior"]

Empowerment Note

Women's advocacy and medical history have documented how psychiatric language was weaponized to silence dissent; contemporary usage should avoid replicating that harm.

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