monomaniacal

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of monomaniacal Until the cycle is broken, the monomaniacal goal of Bills Mafia will be to outlast the Chiefs in the postseason. Jacob Camenker, USA Today, 2 Nov. 2025 Canty and Lally churn with monomaniacal might, spurring Lewis to play bold, declarative melodies that Piorg answers with force. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Pitchfork, 19 Feb. 2026 As the name suggests, looksmaxxers share a monomaniacal commitment to improving their physical appearance. Thomas Chatterton Williams, The Atlantic, 19 Jan. 2026 Your monomaniacal focus creates your monopoly. Jodie Cook, Forbes.com, 15 Sep. 2025 Reaching the moon 56 years ago meant a monomaniacal focus on that one goal, not the split attention—and split budgets—of maintaining a permanent presence in low-Earth orbit while simultaneously trying to reach another world. Jeffrey Kluger, Time, 31 Oct. 2025 Abdul-Mateen’s performance is perpetually glum, but insufficiently monomaniacal, lowering the stakes throughout. Daniel Fienberg, HollywoodReporter, 30 Apr. 2026 This monomaniacal and thoroughly individualized focus turned mindfulness into yet another personalized optimization ritual. Jay Caspian Kang, New Yorker, 10 Feb. 2026 Paul Atreides in Dune, Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown, Marty Mauser in Marty Supreme — these are all characters defined by otherworldly gifts, monomaniacal drive, and a cold-blooded disregard for the concerns of others. Nate Jones, Vulture, 16 Mar. 2026
Recent Examples of Synonyms for monomaniacal
Adjective
  • Maher concluded his acceptance by noting that he’s never been too obsessed with collecting awards hardware.
    Paul Harris, Variety, 29 June 2026
  • Beyond its cult favorite status elsewhere, our shopping team remains collectively obsessed.
    Julia Harrison, Architectural Digest, 23 June 2026
Adjective
  • Madrid, Spain Fifteen Americans and five Australians squeeze into a Madrid living room, eyes fixated on the television showing a soccer match 5,000 miles away.
    Amelie Claydon, New York Times, 2 July 2026
  • As participants watched footage from various journeys, researchers tracked where their gaze fixated and for how long.
    Taryn White, Travel + Leisure, 30 June 2026
Adjective
  • From the frantic frenzy surrounding royal nuptials to the way the internet dissected every possible clue from Zendaya and Tom Holland before they were revealed to have officially tied the knot, weddings like these are a cultural event.
    Amanda Le, InStyle, 3 July 2026
  • On a remote Maine logging road, a couple out for a day of fishing unexpectedly encountered a black bear chasing a frantic moose calf toward their truck.
    Kate Brumback, Los Angeles Times, 2 July 2026
Adjective
  • The Americans, playing in front of a frenzied crowed on home soil in the San Francisco Bay Area, were down a man and nursing a 1-0 lead.
    Chris Biderman, Sacbee.com, 2 July 2026
  • As Norway has advanced in the World Cup, the atmosphere has grown more frenzied in the country than even during a summer or winter Olympics, Tufte said.
    Andrew Greif, NBC news, 1 July 2026
Adjective
  • Filming a comedy is so much fun, and every day is hysterical — even the long days.
    Ryan Gajewski, HollywoodReporter, 27 June 2026
  • Things got worse when the officer found her hysterical and covered in blood, with a cut umbilical cord coming out of her pants and an unresponsive baby in the car with her.
    K. Thor Jensen, PC Magazine, 26 June 2026
Adjective
  • In fact, when a distraught Tom Hayward suddenly reappears, a content Mary is strolling in a local park on her own.
    Kate Erbland, IndieWire, 24 June 2026
  • Her son was too distraught to speak on Sunday.
    Nicholas Williams, New York Daily News, 22 June 2026
Adjective
  • Their ideas about it were often steeped in stereotypes suggesting that Buddhists were irrational and childish in their thinking.
    Livia Gershon, JSTOR Daily, 7 July 2026
  • Scammers often use isolation tactics in phone calls to panic the listener and rush them into making irrational choices that often have financial costs.
    Ella Moore July 2, Miami Herald, 2 July 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Monomaniacal.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/monomaniacal. Accessed 9 Jul. 2026.

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