See lypemania on Wiktionary
{ "head_templates": [ { "args": { "1": "-" }, "expansion": "lypemania (uncountable)", "name": "en-noun" } ], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [ { "categories": [ { "kind": "other", "name": "English entries with incorrect language header", "parents": [ "Entries with incorrect language header", "Entry maintenance" ], "source": "w" }, { "kind": "other", "name": "English terms suffixed with -mania", "parents": [], "source": "w" }, { "kind": "other", "name": "Pages with 1 entry", "parents": [], "source": "w" }, { "kind": "other", "name": "Pages with entries", "parents": [], "source": "w" } ], "examples": [ { "ref": "2008 April 27, Kathryn Harrison, “Diagnosis: Female”, in New York Times:", "text": "Victorian women who weren’t locked up for falling victim to lypemania (melancholy), monomania, homicidal monomania or “moral insanity” were at risk of neurasthenia, a “mirror image of rebellion” in which their “nervous depletion” was explained as the result of their “incursion into the masculine sphere of intellectual labor,” a strain that constitutions formed for tender sentiment couldn’t be expected to support.", "type": "quote" } ], "glosses": [ "melancholy, mournfulness" ], "id": "en-lypemania-en-noun-hGFUHVJS", "links": [ [ "melancholy", "melancholy" ], [ "mournfulness", "mournfulness" ] ], "raw_glosses": [ "(archaic) melancholy, mournfulness" ], "tags": [ "archaic", "uncountable" ] } ], "word": "lypemania" }
{ "head_templates": [ { "args": { "1": "-" }, "expansion": "lypemania (uncountable)", "name": "en-noun" } ], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [ { "categories": [ "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English nouns", "English terms suffixed with -mania", "English terms with archaic senses", "English terms with quotations", "English uncountable nouns", "Pages with 1 entry", "Pages with entries" ], "examples": [ { "ref": "2008 April 27, Kathryn Harrison, “Diagnosis: Female”, in New York Times:", "text": "Victorian women who weren’t locked up for falling victim to lypemania (melancholy), monomania, homicidal monomania or “moral insanity” were at risk of neurasthenia, a “mirror image of rebellion” in which their “nervous depletion” was explained as the result of their “incursion into the masculine sphere of intellectual labor,” a strain that constitutions formed for tender sentiment couldn’t be expected to support.", "type": "quote" } ], "glosses": [ "melancholy, mournfulness" ], "links": [ [ "melancholy", "melancholy" ], [ "mournfulness", "mournfulness" ] ], "raw_glosses": [ "(archaic) melancholy, mournfulness" ], "tags": [ "archaic", "uncountable" ] } ], "word": "lypemania" }
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable All languages combined dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-11-06 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-10-02 using wiktextract (fbeafe8 and 7f03c9b). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.
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