Artificial intelligent assistant

lunacy

lunacy
  (ˈl(j)uːnəsɪ)
  [f. lunatic: see -acy 3.]
  1. The condition of being a lunatic; intermittent insanity such as was formerly supposed to be brought about by the changes of the moon; now applied gen. to any form of insanity (idiocy usually excepted). In legal use, such mental unsoundness as interferes with civil rights or transactions. Also, a fit or attack of such insanity.
  commission of lunacy, a commission, issuing from a court, authorizing an inquiry as to the soundness of a person's mind. commissioner in lunacy, (a) the title given by the statute of 1842 to two officers then first appointed; in 1845 changed to master in lunacy (see below); (b) in subsequent use, a member of a board appointed by the Lord Chancellor to inspect asylums and grant licences to private persons who undertake the charge of lunatics. master in lunacy, a legal officer whose duty it is to investigate the mental condition of persons alleged to be insane and to make orders dealing with the persons and estates of lunatics.

1541 Act 33 Hen. VIII, c. 20 §1 Suche persons..were..than not mad nor lunatike, but sithen that time fallen to madnes or lunacy. 1602 Shakes. Ham. iii. i. 4 Grating so harshly all his dayes of quiet With turbulent and dangerous Lunacy. Ibid. iii. iii. 7 The termes of our estate, may not endure Hazard so dangerous as doth hourely grow Out of his Lunacies. 1611 Cotgr., Lunatique, Lunaticke, in a Lunacie. 1635 Swan Spec. M. vii. §3 (1643) 334 This disease of lunacie, is a disease whose distemper followeth the course of the moon. 1764 Burn Poor Laws 55 Persons, who by lunacy or otherwise are furiously mad. 1818 Cruise Digest (ed. 2) V. 307 Taking advantage of John Lord Brereton's being then under a commission of lunacy. 1874 Bucknill & Tuke Psych. Med. (ed. 3) 14 If the Lord Chancellor..employ a person not a Commissioner in Lunacy to inspect..the state of any asylum, hospital, gaol, house, or place wherein any lunatic is confined. 1880 Libr. Univ. Knowl. (N.Y.) IX. 198 Declared a lunatic..by the certificate of a master in lunacy. 1899 Allbutt's Syst. Med. VIII. 453 The tendency..of all lunacy is to set at naught first and most frequently the optional and then the obligatory rules of conduct.

  b. transf. and fig. Mad folly. Often in much weakened sense.

1588 Greene Alcida (1617) E, One while accusing loue as a lunacie, and then againe [etc.]. 1616 R. C. Times' Whistle iv. 1549 The hellish and mad lunacy Of them that doe commit apostacie For gold. 1733 Cheyne Eng. Malady Pref. (1734) 3 To put a Stop to so universal a Lunacy and Madness. 1817 Coleridge Lay Serm. 425 The wicked lunacies of the gaming-table. 1884 Manch. Exam. 25 June 5/2 All talk of this kind is mere lunacy, involving, moreover, a more than lunatic disregard of facts.

  c. attrib.

1881 Encycl. Brit. XIII. 112/1 The commencement of legislation such as that known in England as the Lunacy Acts. 1887 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 12 Feb. 338/2 Under the present lunacy law. 1897 Daily News 17 Feb. 5/1 Finding that he could not fill up the necessary lunacy forms.

   2. = Moon-blindness. (Cf. lunatic 2 b.)

1600 Surflet Country Farm i. xxx. 200 The horse-mules are more tractable and more easie to guide and learne then the mare-mules be. Both of them are subiect to lunacie.

Oxford English Dictionary

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