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    • To become very excited

      • : to become very excited The crowd was going berserk as the team scored with seconds to go. My first day ashore at Hanna Point, I went berserk taking pictures of the chinstrap penguins.—Vera Spooner
      www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/go berserk
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  2. The idiom “go berserk” is a commonly used expression in English that describes someone who becomes uncontrollably angry or behaves in an irrational manner. This phrase has its origins in Old Norse mythology, where the word “berserker” referred to a warrior who fought with reckless abandon and was believed to be possessed by supernatural ...

  3. To ‘go berserk’ is to behave in a frenzied and violent manner. What's the origin of the phrase 'Go berserk'? The term ‘go berserk’ has something in common with ‘ run amok ‘.

  4. If someone or something goes berserk, they lose control of themselves and become very angry or violent. When I saw him, I went berserk. See full dictionary entry for berserk

  5. not in control, extremely excited, or crazy: He received a perfect score and the crowd went berserk. (Definition of berserk from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of berserk. berserk.

  6. To go crazy, especially in anger. The phrase, and the word "berserk" itself, is related to a group of Norse warriors called "berserkers," who were known for being violently frenzied in battle. Mom will go berserk if she catches you sneaking out after curfew again. Now, don't go berserk or anything, but I've decided to move to Canada.

  7. Mar 4, 2024 · go berserk (third-person singular simple present goes berserk, present participle going berserk, simple past went berserk, past participle gone berserk) (idiomatic, informal) To enter a wild and uncontrollable state. If someone sneaks my lunch again, I'm actually going to go berserk.

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