English to Spanish Dictionary gaga

gaga

gagá
definition
adjective
To the hard-eyed realists of New Delhi, this book will only be a minor provocation from an old friend of India who has now gone slightly gaga .
overexcited or irrational, typically as a result of infatuation or excessive enthusiasm; mentally confused; senile.
translation of 'gaga'
adjective
chocho,
gagá,
lelo
example
Certain challenges might currently be driving you bananas, but don't get overwhelmed, go 'gaga' and give up - or be goaded into accepting the unacceptable for the sake of peace.
I know some people are 'gaga' over it, and I'm glad it's popular, but it's not for me.
The baby smell that everyone goes 'gaga' over makes me want to hurl.
There are people who go 'gaga' over her books, just as there are others who raise voices of protest and indignation over her themes and characters.
To the hard-eyed realists of New Delhi, this book will only be a minor provocation from an old friend of India who has now gone slightly 'gaga' .
You'll either read it and go 'gaga' over it like anyone with any brains does and want to make a movie out of it or you won't.
I'm still going to go 'gaga' when I meet a seemingly great guy and want to run off to Vegas with him to be married by an Elvis impersonator.
Anita knows people may think she has gone completely 'gaga' when they see her and her partner, a builder from Normanton, tie the knot in a register office in Wakefield, but none of that is going to dissuade her.
Finally, round out the meal with fresh pea shoots in garlic, bright as springtime and vibrating with flavor, and you'll finally understand why people go so gaga over authentic Chinese food, and why so many locals are so 'gaga' over Yummy.
Now expose these children to a collection of live geological samples and watch them go 'gaga' over the first chance to hold a fossil in their hands or get a feel of the coloured rock mentioned in the textbook.
After listening to some samples of the album online, though, I understand why blues radio programmers are 'gaga' over the recording.
The U.S. media have gone slightly 'gaga' about what's happening over there in Buckingham Palace.
They may have the Himalayas in all their splendour laid out before them, walks in pine-scented forests, lakes of a blue you can die for, wild flowers that would make mafia dons go 'gaga' , and what is it that they demand?
In the '70s and '80s, they went 'gaga' for isolationism and a Lilliputian military.
This woman who came round is basically a salesperson and managed to sell my Mum an expensive policy handing over ‘power of attorney’ to me and my brother in case my parents both go 'gaga' !
I hope I'm not around to see it but if I am - too 'gaga' to know what's happening - put me in with the admirers of deeply flawed dreamers.
He comes across all quiet and shy but the women go 'gaga' for him.
And the media - that includes me, since I'm writing about it - are 'gaga' .
Ironic, isn't it, that it took a tragedy like the London bombings to illustrate just how completely and inappropriately 'gaga' the British turned eight years ago when Diana died.
When not squabbling over a stuffed teddy bear or a toy steam engine, they could go 'gaga' over a worm pulled out of a flowerpot or a beetle spotted crawling upon the compound wall.
Credits: Google Translate
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