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  1. The meaning of BEDLAM is a place, scene, or state of uproar and confusion. How to use bedlam in a sentence.

  2. a noisy situation with no order: It was bedlam at the football stadium after the game was suspended. Synonym. pandemonium. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Noise & noisy. abuzz. bang something out. barky. bash something out. blast. boisterously. brouhaha. clatter. disturbance. explosive. hubbub. loudly. noisy. piercingly. rackety.

  3. Bedlam definition: a scene or state of wild uproar and confusion.. See examples of BEDLAM used in a sentence.

  4. 1. a noisy confused place or situation; state of uproar: his speech caused bedlam. 2. (Psychiatry) archaic a lunatic asylum; madhouse. [C13 bedlem, bethlem, after the Hospital of St Mary of Bethlehem in London]

  5. a noisy situation with no order: It was bedlam at the football stadium after the match was suspended. Synonym. pandemonium. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Noise & noisy. abuzz. bang something out. barky. bash something out. blast. boisterously. brouhaha. clamour. clatter. disturbance. explosive. loudly. noisy. rackety. resonant.

  6. Bedlam is a scene of madness, chaos or great confusion. If you allow football fans onto the field after the big game, it will be pure bedlam.

  7. Bedlam means a great deal of noise and disorder. People often say `It was bedlam' to mean `There was bedlam.'

  8. bedlam. (bedləm ) uncountable noun. Bedlam means a great deal of noise and disorder. People often say 'It was bedlam' to mean 'There was bedlam'. The crowd went absolutely mad. It was bedlam. He is causing bedlam at the hotel. Synonyms: pandemonium, noise, confusion, chaos More Synonyms of bedlam.

  9. Definition of bedlam noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. Bedlam as name of hospital attested 1450. Phonologically, corruption of Bethlem, itself a corruption of Bethlehem (“a biblical town”), from the Ancient Greek Βηθλεέμ (Bēthleem) from the Hebrew בּית לחם (bet léchem).

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