derange
Example Sentences
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Tolentino explores these overheated environments and their incentives, and how they derange our sense of ourselves and our values.
From Washington Post ● Aug. 9, 2019
Though ambiguity and the unknowable drive and derange this novel’s characters, I don’t believe Apostol is arguing against the existence of demonstrable fact.
From New York Times ● Dec. 26, 2018
And yet neighbors living in democracies can derange themselves, too.
From The New Yorker ● Oct. 31, 2016
Twin Peaks didn’t break the rules of dramatic television so much as subtly derange them.
From Slate ● Nov. 12, 2015
The quality of her clothes threatened to derange Frieda and me.
From "The Bluest Eye" by Toni Morrison
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Some chess dramas show the game as destructive, a pursuit that deranges its disciples.
From New York Times ● Oct. 16, 2020
One shot in particular briefly references, and deranges, the Star Child sequence from “2001: A Space Odyssey.”
From Los Angeles Times ● Sep. 10, 2018
Then again, a whole sequence in which Dreyfuss builds his dream peak in the living room from mud and shrubbery is so forced and silly it nearly deranges all the rest of the movie.
From Los Angeles Times ● Aug. 31, 2017
There are two good reasons for its abolition: it infantilises us, and, in turn, it deranges the royals.
From The Guardian ● May 29, 2012
The poison deranges first the latest and highest products of evolution; it beheads a man, as we may say, in thin slices from above downwards.
From Woman and Womanhood A Search for Principles by Saleeby, C. W. (Caleb Williams)
You make that kind of desperate, deranged threat only if things aren’t going your way.
From The Wall Street Journal ● Apr. 13, 2026
Wineman isn’t afraid to spelunk truly deranged depths, but what’s remarkable is how much style he incorporates into the film’s most outré moments.
From Salon ● Apr. 5, 2026
The senator from Oklahoma also distanced himself from remarks he made at the time in which he called one of the Americans slain in Minneapolis a "deranged individual."
From Barron's ● Mar. 18, 2026
Hemming said: "He absolutely flipped into a deranged state."
From BBC ● Feb. 28, 2026
A bristling fox is better than a deranged, half-shod idiot.
From "The Name of the Wind" by Patrick Rothfuss
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So much so, in fact, that John Wherry, director of the Penn Medicine Immune Health Institute, summed it up this way to Kaiser Health News: “COVID is deranging the immune system.”
From Slate ● Jan. 31, 2023
Because he’s never put himself out there like this, and it’s deranging him because he’s a highly emotional person.
From The Verge ● Apr. 15, 2022
"Covid is deranging the immune system," said John Wherry, director of the Penn Medicine Immune Health Institute and another co-author of the January study.
From Salon ● Mar. 8, 2021
The New Yorker staff writer delivers an essay collection exploring the myriad modern-day forces deranging us, our ideas and our cultural values.
From Washington Post ● Nov. 19, 2019
She was profuse of apologies for "deranging" me.
From Paul Gosslett's Confessions in Love, Law, and The Civil Service by Lever, Charles James
Vocabulary lists containing derange
The Bluest Eye
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Stories of Ourselves
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A Game of Thrones
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