cray-cray
See also: cray cray
English
Etymology
From crazy by shortening and reduplication.
Adjective
cray-cray (comparative more cray-cray, superlative most cray-cray)
- (slang) Crazy.
- 2011, Jessica Verday, The Hidden, Simon Pulse (2011), →ISBN, page 90:
- “Lewis again. The boy cannot get over our breakup. He's like this little puppy dog that follows me around, and it's just driving me cray-cray.”
- 2012, "Hiddleston: There's hope for Loki", Belfast Telegraph, 27 April 2012:
- "What fascinates me about Loki is that there is a glimmer of redemption in him somewhere, that he's not cray-cray (crazy). […]
- 2013, Michele Bardsley, Only Lycans Need Apply, Signet Eclipse (2013), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
- “Are you high?” asked Dove suspiciously. She squinted at Patsy. “Because that's cray-cray.”
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:cray-cray.
- 2011, Jessica Verday, The Hidden, Simon Pulse (2011), →ISBN, page 90:
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:insane.
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