(KAT-sen-jam-uhr)
noun
1. Hangover
2. Distress; depression.
3. Confusion; clamor; uproar.
Etymology
From German, from Katzen (plural of Katze, cat) + Jammer (distress, wailing).
Usage
"Peebles, in his rejoinder, compared the intense activity in cosmology over the last few years to `a really good party.' But he also listed open questions that, he said, left him with an `uneasy feeling'--a kind of cosmic katzenjammer--about whether the concordance will survive new and more precise tests." — James Glanz, Cosmology: Does Science Know the Vital Statistics of the Cosmos? Science (Washington, DC), Nov 13, 1998.
"The characteristic Grimm story has a katzenjammer irreverence and a narrative urgency; its characters are no better than they have to be, and are foxy, wild, lucky or unlucky, and utterly human." — Arthur C. Danto, Maurice Sendak and a Tale Not Quite Grimm Enough, The Washington Post, Nov 6, 1988.