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mental

/ˈmɛntəl/

Adjective

The word operates across three distinct registers: the clinical/technical, the psychiatric, and the slang. In a neutral, technical sense, it describes internal cognitive processes (like 'mental math'). It is sterile and objective, focusing on the mind as a tool for processing information. When referring to health or stability, it carries a heavier weight. While used clinically in 'mental health,' using it as a standalone descriptor (e.g., 'he's mental') can be pejorative or stigmatizing depending on the context, suggesting instability or illness. In British and some Commonwealth slang, it shifts to a high-energy, chaotic connotation. Here, it describes an extreme emotional stateusually excitement, anger, or madnessthat is often seen as exhilarating or shocking rather than pathological.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon during a board meeting, Victoria texting Sterling from across the table.
Mr. Sterling

I'm thinking of banning all chairs to foster a more fluid spiritual energy.

Mr. Sterling
Victoria
Victoria

That is absolutely mental. Please don't.

💡
Victoria uses 'mental' in its informal British sense, meaning 'crazy' or 'insane', to react to Mr. Sterling's eccentric and impractical management idea.

Meanings

Adjectiveintellectual

Relating to the mind or intellectual process.

"Mental arithmetic is a useful skill for daily life."

Adjectivepsychological

Suffering from a mental illness; unstable.

"He was struggling with his mental health after the accident."

Adjectiveunstable

Informal: Wild, crazy, or extremely excited.

"The crowd went absolutely mental when the band finally took the stage."

Etymology

Derived from the Latin word mentalis, which stems from mens, meaning mind. It entered Middle English via Old French, maintaining its primary association with the cognitive faculties and the internal workings of the human intellect.

Related Words

Last Updated: June 8, 2026Report an Error