0 a (usually temporary) fashion; great (but temporary) enthusiasm -- kegilaan
These crazes united individuals on the basis of shared taste in music, wardrobe, courtship rites, and sometimes means of intoxication.
Horizontal bedding strata are crazed with minute shear fractures then stained by seeping iron oxide in solution.
The craze for ballooning is a case in point.
With a despair so terrifyingly reasonable, she cannot be thought irrationally crazed, open to antifeminist ridicule.
Young people looking for fun and escape identified above all with dance crazes like the twist, hully-gully, surf and shake.
Julian stumbles through the streets crazed with despair.
There was a time around '60 or '61 when there was this craze of building nuclear fallout shelters.
The bicycle craze of the 1890s was made possible in part because rubber pneumatic tires replaced solid tires, making bicycle riding more comfortable and popular.