Frenético in english
Hectic
pronunciation: hektɪk part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: hektɪk part of speech: adjective
In gestures
frenético = frantic ; frenetic ; furious ; delirious ; ecstatic ; manic ; berserk ; frenzied ; apoplectic.
Example: Frantic assistants fell over each other's feet trying to retrieve tickets from the rows and rows of issue trays = Frantic assistants fell over each other's feet trying to retrieve tickets from the rows and rows of issue trays.Example: In the sometimes frenetic push towards international cooperation among research libraries, the library needs of the nonscholar are easily overlooked.Example: 'Punch' satirised the opponents more cruelly: 'Here is an institution doomed to scare the furious devotees of laissez faire'.Example: The annals of bibliography afford many examples of the delirious extent to which book-fancying can go, when the legitimate delight in a book is transferred to a rare edition of a manuscript.Example: The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.Example: Rowe's style can be characterized as ricocheting from one idea, quotation, or anecdote to another, and there is a manic quality to the reasoning.Example: Today, hyperbolic comic and cartoon imagery is an established movie aesthetic -- a berserk but ironic Pop Art expressionism.Example: There was a frenzied last-minute rush by Indians to do their bit to see the Taj Mahal through to the elite list of the new Seven Wonders of the World.Example: There's no telling how apoplectic the president will become once these stories reach his favorite medium: television.more:
» estar frenético = be furious .
Example: You hurt her pride and her feelings and she's furious.» poner + Alguien + frenético = make + Alguien + furious .
Example: 'You know I'm an easy-going person, but this has made me furious! I don't know what else to do'.» ponerse frenético = go + postal ; go + crazy ; work up + a lather ; tear + Posesivo + hair out ; be furious ; go into + meltdown ; go + ape(-shit) (on) .
Example: You have also probably read about cases where an employee 'went postal' and entered a company building, shooting his boss and other employees. Example: Sawer went crazy after the woman he was having an affair with was caught and her husband killed her. Example: The boy's mother got angry as a hornet and obtained a lawyer, who also has worked up a lather over this grievous injustice. Example: People are clearly extremely upset, apparently tearing their hair out at having to deal with spam. Example: You hurt her pride and her feelings and she's furious. Example: The pressure of the competition finally got to her and her usual happy-go-lucky demeanour disappeared as she went into meltdown. Example: My wife is a bit of a tree-hugger, so she went ape-shit when I ran over a frog.» volverse frenético = go + berserk ; go + postal ; go + crazy ; work up + a lather ; go into + meltdown ; go + ape(-shit) (on) .
Example: It depicts fascism as a crusade for preserving literature's purity, a crusade that went berserk. Example: You have also probably read about cases where an employee 'went postal' and entered a company building, shooting his boss and other employees. Example: Sawer went crazy after the woman he was having an affair with was caught and her husband killed her. Example: The boy's mother got angry as a hornet and obtained a lawyer, who also has worked up a lather over this grievous injustice. Example: The pressure of the competition finally got to her and her usual happy-go-lucky demeanour disappeared as she went into meltdown. Example: My wife is a bit of a tree-hugger, so she went ape-shit when I ran over a frog.