Rage 1297, from O.Fr. raige (11c.), from M.L. rabia, from L. rabies "madness, rage, fury," related to rabere "be mad, rave."
Mania c.1400, "mental derangement characterized by excitement and delusion," from L.L. mania "insanity, madness"
Etymology means the study of the origin of words.
"Junk" comes from the 15th century word, "Jonke". Its origin is unkown.
Phalanges
The origin of this word is Latin - from Opulentus
From Latin: transformare
It's 'Gothic' in origin; from "ga-maids" meaning bruised, maimed or otherwise damaged or changed in some defective way.
This is madness!
The word madness is a noun. You can not madness! That is the trick to see whether a word is a verb or not. Such as, you can grow and sleep but cannot recitation.
6 letters word means madness is "Insane".
The Tagalog word for "madness" is "kalokohan" or "kabaliwan".
Chaos
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'mad' is madness.
"insanity"
Valea
lunacy
the origin is where the word came from but the specific origin of the word ballot is latin root word.
In Greek mythology, Dionysus was the god of winemaking and wine, as well as religious and ritual madness, as well as fertility and theatre. The Roman equivalent of Dionysus is Bacchus, (origin of the word Bacchanalian)