pandemoniacal

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English

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Etymology

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From pandemoniac +‎ -al or pan- +‎ demoniacal.[1]

Adjective

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pandemoniacal (comparative more pandemoniacal, superlative most pandemoniacal)

  1. Relating to, resembling, or characteristic of, a pandemonium.
    • 1839 July 27, The Athenæum: Journal of Literature, Science, and the Fine Arts, London, page 558, column 2:
      Then, at once he makes a headlong plunge among pistons, and vales, and cylinders, and beams, and plungers, excentrics, pumps, buckets, gudgeons, cranks, connecting rods, expansions, condensations, explosions, rotations, and revolutions; among which he runs riot, and whirls them round him in a chaos of pandemoniacal confusion;
    • 1841, [Catherine Gore], Cecil: or, The Adventures of a Coxcomb, volume I, Philadelphia, Pa.: Lea and Blanchard, pages 132–133:
      [] sooner locate beside the fœtid banks of a Batavian canal, sooner become a toll-keeper of Lethe’s wharf, than breathe my summer breath within scent of thine unsavoury odours, within reach of thy pandemoniacal sounds!
    • 1843, Albany Poyntz, “Clubs and Clubmen”, in Bentley’s Miscellany, volume XIV, London: Richard Bentley, [], page 456:
      Crockford having already upraised a pandemoniacal temple on a scale of brilliancy;

References

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  1. ^ pandemoniacal, adj.”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.