lunacy in A Sentence

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    It was pure Lunacy, it was.

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    2

    It was pure Lunacy.

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    3

    So they took every female into their Lunacy.

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    4

    They will think Christianity is Lunacy.

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    5

    It'll be you! Your Lunacy!

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    6

    It's insanity… Lunacy!

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    7

    But your Lunacy, I think we could do without it.

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    8

    Now, because of your Lunacy, people are taking note of you.

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    9

    Yeah, sort of kind of all about that Lunacy and idiocy.

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    10

    This is but a reminder to us of a more general Lunacy.

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    11

    Rather, he was picked up for vagrancy and was later charged with Lunacy.

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    12

    Now the question arises,“If you rubbish my Lunacy, you must rubbish my love also.

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    13

    If the bank receives the information regarding the death or Lunacy or insolvency of the drawer.

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    14

    It's Lunacy From the look of it, the tentacles are coming out of the beer cans.

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    15

    The human race has today the means for annihilating itself--either in a fit of complete Lunacy, i.e., in a big war.

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    16

    All these things that you are talking about- your love, your poetry, your Lunacy, your rage- are just different manifestations of the mind.

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    17

    The human race has today the means for annihilating itself- either in a fit of complete Lunacy, in a big war, by a brief fit of destruction, or by careless handling of atomic technology, through a slow process of poisoning and of deterioration in its genetic structure.

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    18

    We both crept to the back door like a couple of teenagers getting home late, wondering what Lunacy had possessed a bird to build a nest next to our garden path, outside a family bathroom where our kids squabble loudly about everything from toilet paper to toothpaste.

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    19

    Julius Chambers of the New-York Tribune had himself committed to the Bloomingdale Asylum in 1872, and his account led to the release of twelve patients who were not mentally ill, a reorganization of the staff and administration, and eventually to a change in the Lunacy laws; this later led to the publication of the book A Mad World and Its Inhabitants(1876).

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    20

    Julius Chambers of the New York Tribune had himself committed to the Bloomingdale Asylum in 1872, and his account led to the release of twelve patients who were not mentally ill, a reorganization of the staff and administration, and, eventually, to a change in the Lunacy laws;[6] this later led to the publication of the book A Mad World and Its Inhabitants(1876).

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