Word
Of
The
Day
frenetic
frenetic \frih-NET-ik\
adjective
Something described as frenetic is filled with excitement, activity, or confusion. The word is a synonym of
frantic.
// The event was noisy and
frenetic, which prompted us to leave early.
See the entry >
Examples:
“As Marty Mauser, a wannabe table tennis champion who dreams and deceives his way through his shamble of a life ... [Timothée Chalamet] injects his scenes with enough nervous energy to fuel a plane. Nowhere will you see a performance more
frenetic or impressive.” — Ralph Jones,
Vanity Fair, 9 Feb. 2026
Did you know?
In modern use,
frenetic can describe a focused and intense effort to meet a deadline, or dancing among a hyped-up crowd, but the word’s Middle English predecessor,
frenetik, had a narrower use: it was used to describe those exhibiting a severely disordered state of mind. If you trace
frenetic back far enough, you’ll find that it comes from Greek
phrenîtis, a term referring to an inflammation of the brain. As for
frenzied and
frantic, they’re not only synonyms of
frenetic but relatives as well.
Frantic comes from
frenetik, and
frenzied traces back to
phrenîtis.