different between maniac vs manias

maniac

English

Alternative forms

  • maniack (obsolete)

Etymology

From mania +? -ac. Borrowed from French maniaque, from Late Latin maniacus, from Ancient Greek ???????? (maniakós), adjectival form of ????? (manía, madness).

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?me?ni?æk/
  • Hyphenation: ma?ni?ac
  • Rhymes: -e?n?æk

Noun

maniac (plural maniacs)

  1. An insane person, especially one who suffers from a mania.
  2. A fanatic, a person with an obsession.

Quotations

For quotations using this term, see Citations:maniac.

Synonyms

  • madling

Derived terms

  • brainiac
  • trainiac

Related terms

  • -maniac
  • mania
  • maniacal

Translations

Anagrams

  • Mancia, caiman, mancia

Romanian

Etymology

From French maniaque.

Adjective

maniac m or n (feminine singular maniac?, masculine plural maniaci, feminine and neuter plural maniace)

  1. maniacal

Declension

maniac From the web:

  • what maniac means
  • what's maniac about on netflix
  • what maniac means in english
  • what maniac mean in arabic
  • what maniac means in malay
  • what's maniacal laugh
  • what is maniac mean in spanish
  • maniac what did jed do


manias

English

Noun

manias

  1. plural of mania

Anagrams

  • Mainas, Samian, animas, is a man, sanmai

French

Verb

manias

  1. second-person singular past historic of manier

Anagrams

  • animas

Latin

Noun

mani?s

  1. accusative plural of mania

Portuguese

Noun

manias

  1. plural of mania

manias From the web:

  • what does maniac mean
  • canas spanish
  • what does maniac mean in spanish
  • what does mania mean in english
  • what does manias mean in portuguese
  • leishmaniasis
  • dance maniax
  • mania mania
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like