pandemoniac

adj

Etymology

From pandemonium + -ac, after demoniac.

  1. derived from daemonium
  2. derived from πᾶν
  3. suffixed as pandemoniac — “pandemonium + ac

Definitions

  1. Relating to, resembling, or characteristic of, a pandemonium.

    • I was taken out of my bed, overpowered with the unnatural heavy sleep, as usual, when the necromancer chooses to give me a pandemoniac lodging, to please his own demoniac fancy.
    • We believe, too, that this most ungodly garment was actually black; and there its wearer stood, perking his pandemoniac stock in the face of the pious door-keeper, like Satan at the gates of heaven!
  2. One who delights in pandemonium and often causes it.

    • […]and in his two hands were two wind instruments, which he used alternately for the production of sounds delicious to boys and pandemoniacs.
  3. Something that is characterized by pandemonium.

    • Well sah! wid dat he rushed for Brudder Cain, An' eberry brudder grabbed a brudder, and it is wid pain, I chronikle de windin' up of what started berry cibil; Sich a pandemoniac ez would shame de berry debil;
    • My spirit then sending signals through these partial diameters, through dangers magically implied by powers which roam the pandemoniacs of the Oort dimension.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for pandemoniac. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA