Cra"zy (kr?"z?), a. [From Craze.]
1.
Characterized by weakness or feeblness; decrepit; broken; falling to decay; shaky; unsafe.
Piles of mean and crazy houses.
Macualay.
One of great riches, but a crazy constitution.
Addison.
They . . . got a crazy boat to carry them to the island.
Jeffrey.
2.
Broken, weakened, or dissordered in intellect; shattered; demented; deranged.
Over moist and crazy brains.
Hudibras.
3.
Inordinately desirous; foolishly eager.
[Colloq.]
The girls were crazy to be introduced to him.
R. B. Kimball.
Crazy bone, the bony projection at the end of the elbow (olecranon), behind which passes the ulnar nerve; -- so called on account of the curiously painful tingling felt, when, in a particular position, it receives a blow; -- called also funny bone. -- Crazy quilt, a bedquilt made of pieces of silk or other material of various sizes, shapes, and colors, fancifully stitched together without definite plan or arrangement.
© Webster 1913.