How to Use mania in a Sentence
mania
noun- The entire city has been gripped by baseball mania.
- She would typically experience a period of mania and then suddenly become deeply depressed.
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Only the Wings mania and the Rangers for the next two months.
—Evan Grant, Dallas News, 1 June 2023
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Eclipse mania in the U.S. is reaching new heights in 2024.
—Bychris Morris, Fortune, 4 Mar. 2024
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The mania began months before the March kickoff of the Eras Tour.
—Emily Sabens, Washington Post, 13 Oct. 2023
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The Tigers won that game in the 10th, 4-3, helping give rise to Baddoo-mania.
—Tyler J. Davis, Detroit Free Press, 8 July 2021
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And as seen on runways and the streets over the last few years, logo mania is still all the rage.
—Celia Shatzman, The Hollywood Reporter, 15 June 2022
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In this world of franchise mania, that seems a bit strange.
—Los Angeles Times, 5 June 2022
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Swift, and the media mania around her, has the potential to change that.
—Amanda Hoover, WIRED, 26 Jan. 2024
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When the lumber bubble burst in the spring of 2021, it was expected to be the end of the mania.
—Fortune, 22 Feb. 2022
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Meme mania has returned to the stock market with a vengeance.
—Paul R. La Monica, CNN, 8 Aug. 2022
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True-crime mania has spread like a pestilence, but this is the best the genre has to offer.
—Bill Goodykoontz, The Arizona Republic, 2 May 2022
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Still, the mania around all that’s transpired over the last handful of weeks makes sense.
—Wired, 17 Oct. 2019
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The meme-stock mania that rocked the US stock market is fading.
—John Detrixhe, Quartz, 28 Oct. 2021
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At the height of her mania, Flaherty rose at 4 a.m. to write.
—Molly Young, New York Times, 30 Dec. 2024
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Even oil, which has been pushed higher by the war in Ukraine, got swept up in the selling mania.
—Julia Horowitz, CNN, 10 May 2022
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The lockdowns in the face of the pandemic brought scooter mania to an abrupt halt.
—John Seabrook, The New Yorker, 19 Apr. 2021
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But as with all manias, this one ended up in the gutter.
—Robert Hackett, Fortune, 30 Sep. 2019
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The character gets a stand-alone episode that has all the mania of Uncut Gems.
—Jackson McHenry, Vulture, 5 June 2024
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Taylor Swift mania has made its way to the Ohio Statehouse.
—Luke MacY, The Enquirer, 15 June 2023
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The craze was called tulip mania, or tulipomania, and caused the crash of the Dutch economy.
—Deb Wiley, Better Homes & Gardens, 19 Feb. 2024
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Item 1: Gnome shirt — $32 This is a more practical way to be a part of gnome mania.
—Jordan Kaye, Charlotte Observer, 7 Apr. 2025
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The drop-off in meme mania seems to have hit Robinhood harder than its peers.
—John Detrixhe, Quartz, 28 Oct. 2021
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By the late eighties, America was in the grip of a sweepstakes mania.
—Jeff Maysh, The New Yorker, 17 Aug. 2022
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The bottom-line is that the crypto-mania is not just about crypto.
—Rob Isbitts, Forbes, 25 May 2021
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His scenes with Dee Dee are a breath of fresh air amid the soggy musical mania filling the rest of the movie.
—Mary Sollosi, EW.com, 1 Dec. 2020
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All of us seem to be suffering from this strange amalgam of malaise and mania.
—Danielle Ofri, The New Yorker, 1 Oct. 2020
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There is no denying the leopard-print mania that has taken over both the street style scene and the runways.
—Kiana Murden, Vogue, 1 Nov. 2024
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Not even the mania following JuJu Watkins could diminish Betts.
—Marcus Thompson Ii, New York Times, 4 Apr. 2025
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Scotland later created a Loch Ness Centre and Exhibition near the lake to display 500 years of monster mania.
—Alexis Simendinger, The Hill, 21 Apr. 2025
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'mania.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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