dellenmiş

listen to the pronunciation of dellenmiş
Турецкий язык - Английский Язык
frantic
Insane, mentally unstable

Master have mercy on my sonne, for he is franticke: and ys sore vexed.

{a} mad, crazy, transported with passion
frenzied
excessively agitated; transported with rage or other violent emotion; "frantic with anger and frustration"; "frenetic screams followed the accident"; "a frenzied look in his eye"
{s} frenzied, wild, mad, hysterical
Is an MS-Windows client/script used to navigate IRC It features a heap of popups as well as the basic mIRC features
marked by uncontrolled excitement or emotion; "a crowd of delirious baseball fans"; "something frantic in their gaiety"; "a mad whirl of pleasure"
If an activity is frantic, things are done quickly and in an energetic but disorganized way, because there is very little time. A busy night in the restaurant can be frantic in the kitchen. + frantically fran·ti·cal·ly We have been frantically trying to save her life
Mad; raving; furious; violent; wild and disorderly; distracted
Brain-struck (Greek, phren, the heart as the seat of reason), madness being a disorder of the understanding "Cebel's frantic rites have made them mad " Spenser Fraserian One of the eighty-one celebrated literary characters of the 19th century published in Fraser's Magazine (1830-1838) Amongst them are Harrison Ainsworth, the countess of Blessington, Brewster, Brougham, Bulwer, Campbell, Carlyle, Cobbett, Coleridge, Cruikshank, Allan Cunningham, D'Israeli (both Isaac and Benjamin), Faraday, Gleig, Mrs S C Hall, Hobhouse, Hogg (the Ettrick shepherd), Theodore Hook, Leigh Hunt, Washington Irving, Knowles, Charles Lamb, Miss Landon, Dr Lardner, Lockhart, Harriet Martineau, Dr Moir, Molesworth, Robert Montgomery, Thomas Moore, Jane Porter, Sir Walter Scott, Sydney Smith, Talfourd, Talleyrand, Alaric Watts, Wordsworth, and others to the number of eighty-one
If you are frantic, you are behaving in a wild and uncontrolled way because you are frightened or worried. A bird had been locked in and was by now quite frantic. + frantically fran·ti·cal·ly She clutched frantically at Emily's arm
In a state of panic, worry, frenzy or rush