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14 Sentences With "made mad"

How to use made mad in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "made mad" and check conjugation/comparative form for "made mad". Mastering all the usages of "made mad" from sentence examples published by news publications.

They could be eaten or drowned or made mad at any time, so you need to keep those numbers up.
Still, the qualities that made Mad Men so good are present here, if buried a bit beneath all the excess.
It lacks the long narrative arc and subtle character development that made "Mad Men" an addictive and gratifying show that rewarded close watching.
"I think that the doctor I made mad wanted to make sure that I paid for it no matter what," her mother said.
Already, two-thirds of the Oscars awarded on last month's show — including most of the six awards for the Australian-made "Mad Max: Fury Road" — went to artists from outside the United States.
First comes his sister Rosemary, made mad by a lobotomy, who accompanies him on a trip to the Moon's Sea of Serenity, where they bump into a drunken, antagonistic Nikita Khrushchev and the Red Army Choir.
Museum of Arts and Design Museum dining in a jazzy ninth-floor aerie comes with a view and perhaps a well-made MAD Manhattan, a New York sour with a splash of red wine or the Olmsted, a suitably herbaceous gin drink.
Here is the set, with both the base answer and the extended one: 17A: WHOOPIE = WHOOPIE PIE 18A: GARBAGE = GARBAGE BAG 25A: EARTH = EARTH ART 37A: MADE = MADE MAD 39A: PALE = PALE ALE 56A: SHOUT = SHOUT OUT 64A: AVERAGE = AVERAGE AGE 66A: INSTANT = INSTANT TAN To be honest, I found the clues relatively easy compared to figuring out the theme, but that could just be me.
And I countered this by recalling that he had wanted to make Mad a slick. And I said, “Harvey, if you stay, I’ll let you make Mad a slick. :And Harvey stayed, made Mad a slick, and didn’t even take as much money as he would have gotten at Pageant, because Harvey was never money-crazy.
In his last years of working with Mad, Martin had a falling out with publisher William Gaines over royalties for the paperback compilations of older Mad articles and cartoons released under new omnibus titles, such as The Self-Made Mad. Gaines insisted that Martin's original page rate was for both publication in Mad and all future reprints in any format. Martin objected, claiming at one point that he had likely lost over $1 million in royalties because of this "flat rate" for this work. Martin later testified before a Congressional subcommittee on the rights of freelance artists.
Aura then teases Artemis, saying that her breasts were better than Artemis's, since hers were small and round like a man's, while Artemis's were large and voluptuous like a woman's, and so belied Artemis' supposed "unviolated maidenhood". Deeply offended, the angry Artemis goes to Nemesis, the goddess of divine retribution, who arranges for Aura to be raped. Dionysus is made mad with desire for Aura, by an arrow from the bow of Eros. But knowing that he will never be able to seduce the obdurately virginal Aura, Dionysus drugs Aura with wine, ties her up, and rapes her while she is unconscious and unmoving.
" Maureen Ryan of The Huffington Post called the episode "deeply unsettling" on purpose. She said that "Violence against women was inescapable in this episode, but what made Mad Men's exploration of the topic worthwhile and compelling was the fact that two women in this episode asserted their power and control over their lives. It wasn't a story about helplessness and victimization; it was an episode about everything from sweaty discomfort to outright terror, and how we deal with those emotions." John Swansburg, writing for Slate, said the episode was a "dud," with the fever dream a "very obvious (and not particularly enlightening) way to depict Don wrestling with his infidelity issues.
300px Le Désespéré (Desperation or The Desperate Man) is an 1843-1845 oil on canvas self-portrait by Gustave Courbet, produced early during his stay in Paris. It is now in the private collection of the Conseil Investissement Art BNP Paribas but was displayed in the Musée d'Orsay's 2007 Courbet exhibition dossier du Musée Fabre Montpellier réalisé par des élèves de terminale L, « Gustave Courbet, un artiste engagé », 30 September 2013, p. 22 The Man Made Mad with Fear, unfinished gouache on paper sketch by Courbet (1843-1844, National Gallery of Norway). In the 1840s Courbet produced portraits of his friends and clients as well as self-portraits, including Self-Portrait with a Black Dog (1842).
"The Man Made Mad with Fear", a painting by Gustave Courbet. Many physiological changes in the body are associated with fear, summarized as the fight-or-flight response. An innate response for coping with danger, it works by accelerating the breathing rate (hyperventilation), heart rate, vasoconstriction of the peripheral blood vessels leading to blushing and sanskadania of the central vessels (pooling), increasing muscle tension including the muscles attached to each hair follicle to contract and causing "goosebumps", or more clinically, piloerection (making a cold person warmer or a frightened animal look more impressive), sweating, increased blood glucose (hyperglycemia), increased serum calcium, increase in white blood cells called neutrophilic leukocytes, alertness leading to sleep disturbance and "butterflies in the stomach" (dyspepsia). This primitive mechanism may help an organism survive by either running away or fighting the danger.

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