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freaked-out
adjective as in crazy
Weak matches
- barmy
- bats in the belfry
- batty
- bonkers
- cracked
- crazed
- daft
- delirious
- demented
- deranged
- dingy
- dippy
- erratic
- flaky
- flipped
- flipped-out
- fruity
- idiotic
- mad as a hatter
- mad as a March hare
- maniacal
- mental
- moonstruck
- nutty as fruitcake
- of unsound mind
- out of one's mind
- out of one's tree
- out to lunch
- round the bend
- screw loose
- screwy
- touched
- unbalanced
- unglued
- unhinged
- unzipped
adjective as in frantic
Strong matches
adjective as in high
adjective as in lunatic
adjective as in madding
Strongest match
Weak matches
- agitated
- angry
- at wit's end
- berserk
- beside oneself
- corybantic
- crazy
- delirious
- deranged
- distraught
- excited
- flipped-out
- fraught
- frenetic
- frenzied
- furious
- hectic
- hot and bothered
- hot under the collar
- hyper
- hysterical
- in a stew
- in a tizzy
- insane
- mad
- out of control
- overwrought
- panic-stricken
- rabid
- raging
- raving
- shook-up
- unglued
- unscrewed
- unzipped
- violent
- weird
- weirded out
- wigged out
- wild
- wired
- worked-up
- zonkers
adjective as in manic
adjective as in overwrought
Strongest match
Weak matches
- affected
- agitated
- all shook up
- beside oneself
- crazy
- distracted
- emotional
- excitable
- fired-up
- flipped-out
- histrionic
- histrionical
- hot under collar
- hot-and-bothered
- hyper
- in a state
- nervous
- neurotic
- on edge
- overexcited
- overstrung
- overworked
- spent
- steamed up
- stirred
- strung-out
- tense
- tired
- uneasy
- unstrung
- uptight
- weary
- wired
- worked-up
- worn
- wound-up
adjective as in rabid
Weak matches
Example Sentences
You're freaked out at changing gender roles?
“I remember before my first season aired, I freaked out. I called my friend to walk me off the ledge,” says Beauvais, who also became a co-host on the now-defunct daytime talk show “The Real” around that time.
US singer-songwriter SZA says she was "scared" and "freaked out" during her headline set at Glastonbury festival in June.
The singer, whose real name is Solána Imani Rowe, told Vogue it had been difficult to see the audience, which made her feel "freaked out" and like she was "drowning on stage" as well as "failing".
Although it’s safe to assume everyone who experienced such an incident was well and truly freaked out, only 51 reported a physical injury.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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