What's the difference between lunacy and lunary?

Lunacy


Definition:

  • (n.) Insanity or madness; properly, the kind of insanity which is broken by intervals of reason, -- formerly supposed to be influenced by the changes of the moon; any form of unsoundness of mind, except idiocy; mental derangement or alienation.
  • (n.) A morbid suspension of good sense or judgment, as through fanaticism.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Italy At least England know what to expect from the Azzurri : a masterclass in the retention of possession, orchestrated by Andrea Pirlo in his quarterback role; a stingy defence most likely forged at Juventus; and a maverick forward capable of brilliance and lunacy in equal measures.
  • (2) Afterwards, Josiah Heyman, a professor of anthropology at the University of Texas at El Paso, who studies the border, spelt out what he regards as the lunacy of Sensenbrenner's approach.
  • (3) Even if they don't involve the heights of lunacy scraped by PFI, the returns on the new scheme will have to be higher than those on government bonds in order to pull in investors.
  • (4) Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary, hit out at the "lunacy" of a previous report from the council, which found that the level of benefits given out in the UK is "inadequate".
  • (5) I have to assume that an outside entity was feeding her lines, as it is the only explanation for her shambolic, disjointed lunacy.
  • (6) A fter the summer referendum lunacy, there was a back-to-school feel travelling up to the Green party’s conference last September .
  • (7) In an interview with CNN's Dana Bash, Nunes expressed exasperation with the House' hard-right faction, saying it was "lunacy" to shut down the government in an effort to stop Obamacare.
  • (8) BRITAIN VOTES FOR LUNACY”, screams the Sun, without waiting for the final result.
  • (9) We also need to be outward-looking, working in Europe though not afraid to criticise the lunacy of what’s happening in the eurozone and Greece today.
  • (10) One source briefed the Sunday papers that the education secretary's costly obsession with free schools approached " lunacy "; hours later, a second source leaked official emails that undermined the Lib Dems' claims that they had figured out how to fund their own pet project, free meals for all infant pupils.
  • (11) Full of scientific lunacy and wild action, this book spawned a slew of sequels chronicling the exploits of group Capt Timothy "Tiger" Clinton RAF (retired), his son Rex, Prof Lucias Brane and his butler Judkins in the good ship Spacemaster (which handily runs on the cosmic rays all around us – which certainly saves on fuel bills).
  • (12) What’s needed is strongly worded advice from America’s allies about the fragility of the global economy and lunacy of a global trade war.
  • (13) Odemwingie first criticised West Brom following his abortive move to Queens Park Rangers on 31 January, when he turned up at Loftus Road without permission in an act labelled as "total lunacy" by his manager, Steve Clarke.
  • (14) Dominic Dromgoole Shakespeare's Globe Even from the perspective of an unsubsidised theatre, it would seem perilous to the point of lunacy to lessen the amount of overall subsidy in our culture.
  • (15) Thames river pageants have always been a mixture of the grand and the loony, and this one looks like it is going to have elements of complete lunacy.
  • (16) Spare me the weirdos who can't outgrow their attachment to them; and spare me the fetishising lunacy that compels adults to find a way to communicate with their children through the agency of soft mouths.
  • (17) In the preface he wrote: "I do not believe the fable that men read travel books to escape from reality: they read to escape into it, from a crazy wonderland of armaments, cant, political speeches at once insincere and illiterate, propaganda, and social injustice which the lunacy of humanity has constructed over a period of years."
  • (18) But there is a difference between enjoying the lunacy and letting such lunatic declarations become the norm – which they now are, from supermodels to CEOs.
  • (19) Although a 1964 film captured something of the play's anarchic lunacy, with Eric Sykes constructing a model of the Old Bailey in his living room while a mute Jonathan Miller taught 100 speak-your-weight machines to sing the Hallelujah Chorus, the play was too theatrical for the cinema.
  • (20) I tell him of a particularly vile one, with references to hanging, lunacy and HIV.

Lunary


Definition:

  • (a.) Lunar.
  • (n.) The herb moonwort or "honesty".
  • (n.) A low fleshy fern (Botrychium Lunaria) with lunate segments of the leaf or frond.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The toxins in the muscle, skin and liver of the puffer fish Lagocephalus lunaris lunaris and those in the skin and liver of another puffer fish Fugu niphobles were purified by successive column chromatography on activated charcoal, Bio-Gel P-2 and Bio-Rex 70 and analyzed by electrophoresis and thin layer chromatography.
  • (2) Among of those insects the richest fauna was found on Copris lunaris, Carabus coriaceus, C. hortensis and Musca domestica.
  • (3) Although, regardless of the tissues and species, tetrodotoxin was predominant and accounted for more than 90% of the total toxins, the following minor toxins were newly detected; toxin A and toxin B in L. lunaris lunaris and toxin C in F. niphobles.

Words possibly related to "lunacy"

Words possibly related to "lunary"