insanify

English

Etymology

insane +‎ -ify

Verb

insanify (third-person singular simple present insanifies, present participle insanifying, simple past and past participle insanified)

  1. (transitive) To render insane.
    • 1809, The Edinburgh Review, volume 14, page 43:
      There may be, at present, some very respectable men at the head of these maniacs, who would insanify them with some degree of prudence, and keep them only half mad, if they could. But this won't do; Bedlam will break loose, and overpower its keepers.
    • 1847, The New Monthly Magazine and Humorist, page 38:
      Under the insanifying influence produced by the horrors of the French Revolution, and the angry excitement of the war then raging, every Review was perverted into an instrument of political animosity and religious, or rather of ir-religious, hatred.