madhouse - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈmædˌhaʊs/
madhouse (plural madhouses)
- (obsolete) A house where insane persons are confined; an insane asylum.
Synonyms: insane asylum, mental hospital; see also Thesaurus:mental hospital- 1838, Boz [pseudonym; Charles Dickens], Oliver Twist; […], volume (please specify |volume=I, II, or III), London: Richard Bentley, […], →OCLC:
The palace, the night-cellar, the jail, the madhouse: the chambers of birth and death, of health and sickness, the rigid face of the corpse and the calm sleep of the child: midnight was upon them all. - 1997, Roy Porter, The Greatest Benefit to Mankind, Folio Society, published 2016, page 263:
The king experienced his first attack in autumn 1788, and as his condition worsened and the physicians-in-ordinary proved unable to cope or cure, the Reverend Dr Francis Willis (1717–1807), a clergyman doctor who ran a madhouse in Lincolnshire, was called in. - 2002 February 27, Richard Eder, “BOOKS OF THE TIMES; When the Impostor Tries To Do the Job in Earnest”, in The New York Times[1]:
He is almost a tourist of his own book. There is a hint of the fad a couple of centuries ago for visiting madhouses in search of the exotic.
- 1838, Boz [pseudonym; Charles Dickens], Oliver Twist; […], volume (please specify |volume=I, II, or III), London: Richard Bentley, […], →OCLC:
- (figuratively, by extension) A chaotic, uproarious, noisy place.
- 1970 September 13, Robie MacAuley, “The Army as one of life's awful necessities”, in The New York Times[2]:
This taut, soldierly, professional story is something of a stranger among American novels about war making. Angry civilians have writ ten most of the best fiction on the subject, from “Three Soldiers” through “Catch‐22,” to make the point (with a good deal of literary overkill) that wars are mass insanity and that armies are madhouses.
- 1970 September 13, Robie MacAuley, “The Army as one of life's awful necessities”, in The New York Times[2]:
insane asylum
- Azerbaijani: dəlixana
- Bulgarian: лудница (bg) f (ludnica)
- Catalan: manicomi (ca) m
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 瘋人院 / 疯人院 (zh) (fēngrényuàn) - Danish: galehus n
- Finnish: hullujenhuone (fi)
- Galician: manicomio (gl) m
- German: Irrenhaus (de) n, Irrenanstalt (de) f, Klapsmühle (de) f
- Greek: τρελάδικο (el) n (treládiko), τρελοκομείο (el) n (trelokomeío), μουρλοκομείο (el) n (mourlokomeío)
- Ido: dementerio (io)
- Italian: manicomio (it) m
- Macedonian: лудница f (ludnica)
- Malay: suaka gila
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: galehus n
Nynorsk: galehus n, galnehus n - Polish: dom wariatów (pl) m, psychiatryk (pl) m, szpital psychiatryczny (pl) m, wariatkowo (pl) n
- Portuguese: manicómio (pt) m (Portugal), manicômio (pt) m (Brazil)
- Punjabi: ਪਾਗਲਖਾਨਾ m (pāglakhānā)
- Russian: дурдом (ru) m (durdom)
- Serbo-Croatian: ludnica (sh) f
- Spanish: manicomio (es) m
- Sranan Tongo: kolera
- Swedish: dårhus (sv) n
- Turkish: delihane (tr)
- Ukrainian: божеві́льня (uk) f (boževílʹnja)
- Unami: kpëcheònkëlëwikaon
place resembling an insane asylum
- Azerbaijani: dəlixana
- Catalan: manicomi (ca) m
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 瘋人院 / 疯人院 (zh) (fēngrényuàn) - Danish: galehus n
- Finnish: hullujenhuone (fi)
- Galician: manicomio (gl) m
- German: Tollhaus (de) n
- Greek: τρελάδικο (el) n (treládiko), τρελοκομείο (el) n (trelokomeío), μουρλοκομείο (el) n (mourlokomeío)
- Italian: manicomio (it) m, gabbia di matti f
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: galehus n
Nynorsk: galehus n, galnehus n - Polish: dom wariatów (pl) m, wariatkowo (pl) n
- Portuguese: manicomio m
- Romanian: balamuc (ro) n
- Russian: дурдом (ru) m (durdom)
- Spanish: manicomio (es) m
- Swedish: dårhus (sv) n
- Turkish: delihane (tr)