Frenzy in a sentence as a noun

Replace "NSA" by "China" and the whole world would have gone into frenzy.

You are like this big fat guy with a machine guy at a bar doing shooting-frenzy trying to **** a fly.

It's very costly for the company, and it had Wall Street in a frenzy when it first launched.

The tech "press" is in a feeding frenzy trying to be the first to 'diagnose' the cause and the eventual effect.

This means that investors aren't getting many large returns and, when somebody smells "jackpot", there is a frenzy.

But the acquisition-frenzy in mobile seems smarter, and the acquisition of Tumblr smarter still.

I just finished "Masters of Doom" a couple of days ago, and I've been on a sort of Doom/Quake/id/Carmack/Romero information frenzy ever since.

This incident blew up into a tabloid-like frenzy because smart people abandoned reason in favour of sensation.

It's entirely possible that the post-9/11 security frenzy ends up being another historical footnote.

It's okay - hyperventilating paleo bloggers have raised concerns about saponins -- but the whole "superfood" frenzy about quinoa is just a tad off base.

"It's so easy to get caught up in the frenzy of "start-up culture", "easy money", and "herd mentality" that we often have to make an effort to stop and tell ourselves, "Wait a minute.

It might be a good marketing strategy as he managed to get coverage by a couple of outlets during the elections frenzy in the US, but this "filter bubble" buzz-phrase is nonsense.

Can you imagine working at the WTC and having a bad day, and jokingly sending an email to a coworker about bombing the place because you're so mad. 9/11 happens a year later, the government looks in its archives for the email you sent, and in a post-9/11 frenzy sends you to Guantanamo to "await trial".

Unfortunately, when the internet outrage machine is whipped up into a frenzy, people don't seem to care and will happily upvote and share anything that supports their side, even if it's completely full of ****.

When wealth decreases, identity is challenged or political drama whips the mob into a frenzy political instability ensues.

Losing it all in a get-rich-quick frenzy is sad - but it's sad in a "I can't believe people are willing to bet their lives on this" way, not a "this poor person lost his/her entire life savings due to the corruption of the financial industry" way.

If driven by US involvement, will a grassroots rebellion against the Cuban regime actually result in an open, honest democracy or will it devolve into a feeding frenzy for US interests, led by US-friendly politicians pushed into place by US operatives?

Frenzy definitions

noun

state of violent mental agitation

See also: craze delirium fury hysteria