Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"He seems to have lost all reason, and he's in very great pain.
The general consensus of opinion at the time was that Louis had lost all reason.
The man had lost all reason, all sense of rational thinking.
If a lot is tearing you up, you can lose all reason.
"She's got your brain so befuddled you've lost all reason."
To a Fury, being excommunicated probably meant losing all reason for living.
He reached down between them, stroking her until she lost all reason, all sanity.
Her fling with Wilson, a married man, causes her to lose all reason.
But when he was on the point of losing all reason, of dragging her down to the wild grass, she pulled back.
"Not so drunk that I've lost all reason."
The world had lost all reason.
An answer which convinced Soloman, finally, that he was dealing with a mechanism that had lost all reason.
It made her lose all reason.
I felt that if I lost this dear woman, I would lose all reason for being.
Some people see the word 'housewives' and it pushes a button in them and they seem to lose all reason."
Have you lost all reason?
Tessa is the monster's final victim, and after her death, Rogelio slowly begins to lose all reason to continue in becoming a hero.
"Attaroa has lost all reason.
She hates how she was in the past and states that if Fulcanelli can't be resurrected she would lose all reason for living.
He raved as if he had lost all reason, and she became afraid that someone-or something-would overhear.
In Rachmaninoff's "What Happiness," she boldly embodied a young woman so sick with desperate love that she has lost all reason.
Xander confesses to Giles, who is appalled at his foolishness, saying that victims of love spells lose all reason and become obsessed, even murderous.
By 1930, Sorabji had become disillusioned with concert life and developed a growing interest in gramophone recordings, believing that he would eventually lose all reason to attend concerts.
Gregory was eventually called forth from his pit in c. 297 to restore to sanity Tiridates III, who had lost all reason after he was betrayed by Roman emperor Diocletian.
Endril was enraged by the destruction of Cairnwald, and seemed to have lost all reason ... so, outnumbered, Hathor had silently acquiesced, knowing that any objections he might raise would be met with scorn.