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26 Sentences With "raving lunatic"

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

"He was drunk half the time, and a raving lunatic," he said.
Yet, Grace continues to believe he's a raving lunatic and she never agreed to such a pact.
Gail is treated like a raving lunatic, but really, she's the only person screaming "Fire" in a burning building.
While speaking to Daenerys about armies of the undead and an ensuing "Long Night," Jon Snow sounded like a tinfoil hat-wearing, conspiracy theory-spewing, absolutely raving lunatic.
We've got a raving lunatic in the White House, hate crimes are at an all time high, and the Doomsday Clock just moved 30 seconds closer to midnight.
If appreciation is absent, accountability is elusive at best, there&aposs a raving lunatic of a boss, and everyone&aposs on LinkedIn during work, you might be stuck in a toxic workplace.
Anyone can spot the obvious signs of a toxic workplace — appreciation is absent, accountability is elusive at best, there&aposs a raving lunatic of a boss, everyone&aposs on LinkedIn during work.
He's competing against Rudy Giuliani, who, over recent years, has done such a masterful impersonation of a raving lunatic that I doubt he could get seasonal retail work at the Container Store.
Then there's the young profiler (Alexandra Daddario) who learns that uncuffing a raving lunatic who kept a bunker stocked with kidnapped women (Brendan Fletcher, practically foaming at the mouth) might not have been her smartest move.
It was good, after I put my raving lunatic act on.
Mohinder says he isn't interested in helping Bennet, but Bennet leaves his card anyway. Nathan Petrelli approaches Mohinder in "The Fix." Mohinder quickly apologizes for coming off as "a raving lunatic" when they first met. Nathan has come to Mohinder in an attempt to help his brother, Peter Petrelli.
Renfield faints as a bat appears, and Dracula's three wives close in on him. Dracula waves them away, then attacks Renfield himself. Aboard the schooner Vesta, Renfield is a raving lunatic slave to Dracula, who hides in a coffin and feeds on the ship's crew. When the ship reaches England, Renfield is discovered to be the only living person.
He ends up revealing that he has strong sexual feelings for Doug. Edward learns that his step mom, Dagmar, is a “raving lunatic.” Then Edward's world falls apart when he learns that his dream of going to Juilliard and becoming an actor may be hindered because his father refuses to pay for Edward's college unless he goes into business.
Bagley, now with the boil head, moustache, and personality (the movie's third personification from Grant after the stressed executive and the raving lunatic) returns home to celebrate his wedding anniversary, with the original head merely resembling a boil on his left shoulder. The "boil" eventually withers but doesn't die, yet Bagley resumes his advertising career rejuvenated and ruthless, although without his wife, who decides to leave his new cruel persona.
Breyfogle expressed an interest using the relationship as a source for internal conflict in the character. "... I figured that because Anarky represents the epitome of reason, one of the biggest crises he could face would be to discover that his father was the exact opposite: a raving lunatic!" Alternatively, Grant saw it as an opportunity to solidify Anarky's role in the Batman franchise. Grant's decision to pursue the suggestion ran into conflict with Dennis O'Neil, who protested against it.
This night, however, the unfortunate cannibal attempts to creep up on the cat-napping Conan and pays with his life. Realizing his room is a trap, Conan escapes into the Zamboulan streets where he encounters both a naked woman and her deranged fiancé. Conan rescues her from another attack by the roaming cannibals. The woman tells him how she tried to secure her fiancé's affection with a love potion, which instead made a raving lunatic of him.
Kander is reviewing recordings of recent events, and when he plays the video of the Earth party's arrival, he reacts with horror...then slips under the mental control of the 'Earth men'. Mesmerised, Kander locks and jams the door, turns the emergency oxygen supply full on, and wrecks the video player. A passing woman also witnesses this act and calls in the emergency. By the time the senior staff are present, Kander is a raving lunatic and tearing the room apart.
He was described in contemporary news accounts as a "raving lunatic", being "stark mad", and suffering from "religious frenzy".TREASURER RAINE'S (sic) HEALTH in the New York Times on May 22, 1874 He was declared incapacitated, and sent to the Utica State Asylum for treatment. On June 1, 1874, Abraham Lansing was appointed by Governor John Adams Dix as Acting Treasurer, pending Raines's recovery or a decision by the State Legislature which would convene only next January.THE NEW STATE TREASURER, in the New York Times on June 2, 1874 After recovering his mental health, Raines was reinstated to the Treasury by Governor Dix on August 19, 1874.
It was good, after I put my raving lunatic act on. In 1992, Nine Inch Nails relocated to 10050 Cielo Drive, Benedict Canyon, Los Angeles (renamed "Le Pig" by Reznor), the site of the Tate murders, when Charles Manson's "family" murdered Sharon Tate, wife of noted film director Roman Polanski, and four of her friends. The band used it to record Broken, an extended play (EP) that was the first Nine Inch Nails release distributed by Interscope Records and reached the top 10 on the Billboard 200. In the liner notes, Reznor credited the 1991 Nine Inch Nails touring band as an influence on the EP's sound.
One of the possessed appears to be a raving lunatic, but as the days pass the possessing soul's presence in a normally-functioning brain restore his sanity and his memory. The possessing soul turns out to be Al Capone, a famed gangster from 20th century Chicago. Capone organises the possessed and they take over the planet in a matter of weeks. Capone realises they need to keep the planet's economy and starship-building capability going to defend themselves from any counter-attack, so many citizens are spared from possession (the act of which interferes with electrical systems nearby) as long as they contribute to the expansion of Capone's 'Organisation'.
Cox has explored the phenomena of dance culture, a subject that has spawned five exhibitions of portraits of clubbers, party-drug takers and bouncers, most notably in Rave: Club Culture (2000), Ecstasy: a celebration (2000)Method in the Madness, Peter Timms, The Age, 4 December 2000 and Confessions of a Raving Lunatic (2002). As an out gay artist, Cox has often featured homoeroticism within his work. His exhibition Testosterone Zone (1996) dealt with, amongst other things, frank male nudity and the still-existing taboo over public representations of male genitalia. To this end, he has always been outspoken against censorship in the arts, as seen in an interview in issue 11 of Artist Profile magazine (2010).
The White Rabbit has no superhuman abilities but is well-educated (at least a Bachelor of Arts degree in Literature or its equivalent) and knows some martial arts. The White Rabbit is obsessed with the works of Lewis Carroll, and her equipment reflects this: her weaponry includes an umbrella that shoots razor-sharp or explosive carrots, a large, rideable, heavily armed robot rabbit, genetically-engineered killer bunnies and jet- boots. She also has two custom-modified vehicles: a zeppelin called the Flying Hare, and a van called the Bunnymobile. Due to her ridiculous appearance, insanity, lack of judgement and bad reputation, few people take her seriously, and she is generally dismissed as a raving lunatic.
The Seventh Victim is described by Newman as being "an unacknowledged spin-off" of Cat People, as it features Tom Conway's character returning as Dr. Judd, as well as another haunted woman eager to embrace death. In the film, Judd recalls that he once knew a mysterious woman who was in fact a "raving lunatic", even though Judd's character died in Cat People, making the relationship between the two fictional narratives incoherent. In memos and early drafts of the screenplay, Conway's character was referred to as "Mr. Siegfried", leading film scholars to believe that the character's name was changed to create continuity between the two films and capitalize on Cat Peoples success.
In 1997 the story zeroed in on Josh Lewis' rocky marriage to Annie Dutton. Annie had once been a sweet nurse (and, at one point, Rick Bauer's wife; although this marriage would be later ruled to be illegal, as was the one with Josh, when it was revealed Annie had never even divorced her first husband, Eddie Banks) but had become a pill addict. Annie became a raving lunatic who got artificially inseminated to keep Josh at her side, and pretended to be Reva's long-lost sister to guilt her into staying away. When that didn't work and she also lost her baby, she pushed herself down a flight of stairs at the Spaulding mansion, framing Reva for the death of her fetus.
Labeled "Fair Warning: For Adult Intellectuals Only", Zap #1 featured the publishing debut of Robert Crumb's much-bootlegged Keep on Truckin' imagery, an early appearance of unreliable holy man Mr. Natural and his neurotic disciple Flakey Foont, and the first of innumerable self-caricatures (in which Crumb calls himself "a raving lunatic", and "one of the world's last great medieval thinkers"). The debut issue included the story "Whiteman," which detailed the inner torment seething within the lusty, fearful heart of an outwardly upright American. For the second issue, Crumb invited S. Clay Wilson, Victor Moscoso and Rick Griffin to contribute. Gilbert Shelton joined the crew with issue #3, and Robert Wiliams and Spain Rodriguez joined with issue #4, completing the roster.
David Langford's 1988 parody collection The Dragonhiker's Guide to Battlefield Covenant at Dune's Edge: Odyssey Two contains a parody of "The Gateway of the Monster", in which the creature manifests not as a human hand, but as another body part entirely. Rick Kennett has also written a parody of "The Whistling Room" called "The Sniffling Room", published in The Goblin Muse, April 2000. In this brief story, rather than receiving an invitation and then eagerly attending Carnacki's storytelling evenings, the attending gentlemen are instead kidnapped, dragged to Carnacki's home, and forced to listen against their will to a tale told by a man they consider to be a raving lunatic. It thus mocks primarily the common framework of the Carnacki stories, rather than Carnacki's actual investigation.

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