frenético
frantic ; frenetic ; furious ; delirious ; ecstatic ; manic ; berserk ; frenzied.
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.
In the sometimes frenetic push towards international cooperation among research libraries, the library needs of the nonscholar are easily overlooked.
'Punch' satirised the opponents more cruelly: 'Here is an institution doomed to scare the furious devotees of laissez faire'.
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.
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.
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.
Today, hyperbolic comic and cartoon imagery is an established movie aesthetic - a berserk but ironic Pop Art expressionism.
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.
estar frenético
be furious
You hurt her pride and her feelings and she's furious.
poner + Alguien + frenético
make + Alguien + furious
'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
You have also probably read about cases where an employee 'went postal' and entered a company building, shooting his boss and other employees.
Sawer went crazy after the woman he was having an affair with was caught and her husband killed her.
The boy's mother got angry as a hornet and obtained a lawyer, who also has worked up a lather over this grievous injustice.
People are clearly extremely upset, apparently tearing their hair out at having to deal with spam.
You hurt her pride and her feelings and she's furious.
volverse frenético
go + berserk
go + postal
go + crazy
work up + a lather
It depicts fascism as a crusade for preserving literature's purity, a crusade that went berserk.
You have also probably read about cases where an employee 'went postal' and entered a company building, shooting his boss and other employees.
Sawer went crazy after the woman he was having an affair with was caught and her husband killed her.
The boy's mother got angry as a hornet and obtained a lawyer, who also has worked up a lather over this grievous injustice.