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Unsane and insane are different words. Insane is much stronger. Unsane means "not sane in some way", While insane has become something like "having lost all sanity". Insane is much more offensive.
Nov 2, 2013
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Dec 4, 2010 · ... or profound experience than insanity, meaning that “unsane” has a less profound meaning than “insane.” So, the prefix “un-” in this case ...
Feb 17, 2012 · One blogger in the general-semantics tradition writes: "The difference between unsane and insane is that unsane doesn't necessarily get you into ...
Mar 12, 2010 · ... insanity means you make a stop on the unsane road stop though. There maybe a straight shot to the insane land no layovers in the unsane.
unsane. adjective. un·​sane. "+. : lacking in sanity. people are unsane when their mental maps of reality are slightly out of correspondence with the real world ...
unsane (comparative more unsane, superlative most unsane) ... insane (that is, not mentally ill, or at least not clinically so) but is also not sane under a ...
unsane ... Its something past insanity and it is without sanity. So maybe it could mean mental enlightenment or mindless oblivion. Though I knew I had been insane ...
Jan 4, 2024 · Insane in Latin is 'Insanus'. So basically it means not a healthy mind or not a sound mind.
Jul 1, 2016 · @killjoy: I think you mean insane? That means crazy in general translation. · If you're seeing someone use, "unsane," it's either a typo, or they ...