Take Leave Of One's Senses Meaning

Take Leave Of One's Senses is an idiom. The meaning of this idiom is (idiomatic) To go crazy; to stop behaving rationally.. Explore more Idiom Meanings.

Take Leave Of One's Senses

(idiomatic) To go crazy; to stop behaving rationally.

Example : 1868, Wilkie Collins, The Moonstone, ch. 1:  Here I am, with my book and my pencil—the latter not pointed so well as I could wish, but when Christians take leave of their senses, who is to expect that pencils will keep their points?.1880, Henry Adams, Democracy: An American Novel, ch. 10:  She plainly said that men seemed to take leave of their senses as soon as women were concerned.1920, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Further Chronicles of Avonlea, ch. 3:  "Rachel Spencer, have you taken leave of your senses? What do you mean by such nonsense as this?"2005 May 8, Nancy Gibbs, "Midlife Crisis? Bring It On!," Time:  Sue Shellenbarger was 49, living in Oregon and writing her "Work & Family" column for the Wall Street Journal, when in the space of two years she got divorced, lost her father, drained her bank account and developed a taste for wilderness camping and ATV riding that left her crumpled up on an emergency-room gurney. "People around me thought I'd taken leave of my senses," she says.2007, HRH The Prince of Wales, The Elements of Organic Gardening, Kales Press, page 7:  One of the great difficulties associated with the adoption of organic or, perhaps more appropriately, sustainable principles at the time I started turned out to be convincing others that you had not taken complete leave of your senses.

Meaning of Take Leave Of One's Senses

Take Leave Of One's Senses is an idiom. It is one of the most commonly used expressions in English writings. Take Leave Of One's Senses stands for (idiomatic) To go crazy; to stop behaving rationally.. Explore Urdupoint to find out more popular Idioms and Idiom Meanings, to amplify your writings

Browse More Idioms