mania-, -mania, -maniac, -maniacal, -manic, -manically, -maniacally

(Greek: a specific mental disorder or obsessive preoccupation with something; madness, frenzy; obsession, or abnormal desire for or with something or someone; also, an excessive enthusiasm or fondness for something that is not safe or advantageous)

Hellenomania
1. A display of erudition by excessive use of Greek terms.
2. Using cumbersome Greek or Latin terms instead of those readily “understandable English words”.
heroinomania
An addiction to heroin.
hieromania
1. Religious insanity; a pathological religious fervor characterized by delusions with a religious content.
2. Pathological religious visions or delusions.
3. An abnormal interest in priests.
hieromaniac
1. Someone who has a religious fervor characterized by delusions with a religious content.
2. Anyone who has pathological religious visions or delusions.
hippomania
An obsessive fascination for or an excessive enthusiasm for horses.
hippomaniac
1. A fondness for horses.
2. Someone who loves horses.
hippomaniacally
Like a mad horse.
hodomania (s) (noun), hodomanias (pl)
1. An abnormal desire to travel.
2. An excessive compulsion to be traveling.
homicidomania (s) (noun), homicidomanias (pl)
Any kind of mental disease where there is an irresistible impulse to commit murder; used now instead of the previously used term of phonomania.
hydrargyromania
A mental disorder due to mercury poisoning.
hydrodipsomania
An epileptic condition characterized by attacks of uncontrollable or insatiable thirst.
hydromania
1. An excessive craving for water or liquids; an uncontrollable fascination with water.
2. An impulse to commit suicide by drowning.
hygromania
A passion, or craving, for water.
hygromaniac
Someone who has a desire, passion, or craving, for water.
hylomania
An excessive tendency towards materialism or a fascination for forests.

Quiz You can find self-scoring quizzes over many of the words in this subject area by going to this Compulsive Behavior page.

Cross references of word families that are related directly, or indirectly, to: "anger, angry; rage, wrath, fury; rave": fur-, furi-; ira-; lysso-; rab-, rav-.