Tizzy in a sentence as a noun

This will have the fan boys in an absolute tizzy if true.

That really gets the anti-Apple folks in a tizzy for sure.

This is going to throw advertising firms into an epic tizzy.

Language is ever evolving, and the way we talk today would have sent my granddad into a tizzy.

The mere mention of a-god-like-concept has put a number of folks here into a tizzy, and it's sad.

Knowing how many of the real geeks around the world would collapse into a Sheldonesque tizzy fit about a scene is half the fun of the scene.

Before you-all get in a tizzy from Techcrunch's sensationalist headlines, please take a look at some of the links to the actual law in the comments below.

It's a bit sad that people got in such a tizzy over it, because the Ruby people could learn a lot from Debian about packaging stuff and managing it over time.

The very thought that their beliefs aren't universal, that legislators don't consider their opinions plated in gold sends them into a tizzy.

The issue is not that there is anything intrinsically wrong with such examples, but because such examples cause people to get themselves worked up into a tizzy and miss the point.

But using history as an indicator of profitability in the future is what has everyone in a tizzy about Groupon's business viability.

If being made aware of people who do not share your religious convictions, both in style and magnitude, really effected you in a negative way, then you would be in a non-functioning emotional tizzy 24/7 unless you were living isolated away on a compound or something.

" Most importantly, and most relevantly, it completely disrupts their mathematical circuitry; it is amazing how many times I've run into customers that get in a tizzy when you quote them "10 hours at $250/hr" but happily sign on the dotted line when you tell them it's going to be $2500 flat and be done in two days.

I get it that the US is pissed off that people are sending Wikileaks classified information, the Nixon administration was really pissed off by Woodward and Bernstein's revelations and the Johnson adminstration was in a tizzy over the release of the Pentagon papers, but they didn't turn around and declare the papers and the journalists 'enemies of the state' now did they?

Tizzy definitions

noun

an excited state of agitation; "he was in a dither"; "there was a terrible flap about the theft"

See also: dither pother fuss flap