Some euphemisms for insane:
The word 'euphemism' is a noun, a word for a mild or indirect word or expression substituted for one considered to be too harsh or blunt, unpleasant or embarrassing.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:A euphemism can't minimize the fact that he is dead. (subject of the sentence)Caution, the word love can be a euphemism for ownership and control. (direct object of the verb 'can be')
It's a euphemism for "damn"
A euphemism is a word that is meant to imply another in a way that is slightly less harsh or direct. One euphemism for prison, jail, rehabilitation center or penitentiary could be "pen."
It is a euphemism for "God's wounds" dating from 1592.
It is not a word is a number, 5150. The police and such use that number on radio calls when confronted by a insane individual. Lunatic, insane, demented, unsound, maniac, moonstruck, eccentric, and foolish are relative terms.
The word "john" is a euphemism, or substitute, for the word "toilet."
There are no perfect rhymes for the word euphemism.
The euphemism is corpulent.
The euphemism, casualties is used to replace the word deaths.
A euphemism is a figure of speech. You use a euphemism when you don't want to use the actual name or word for something.Instead of saying that she died, he used a euphemism.
euphemism.
dysphemism
Gardener
No. It is a figure of speech. A euphemism is a word substituted for another word that is deemed unacceptably explicit. For example, the word mortician came into vogue as a euphemism for "undertaker," which was considered too direct and to the point.
Well, a phrase rather than a word, but yes, "pass away" is a euphemism, this one meaning "die".
Insane is an adjective.
It is a euphemism for the word damn.