Sometimes I worry that the Bay Area media, me included, goes too gaga over Luck.
From the sfgate.com
Can't wait for him to go gaga, although I do not know how that would be noticed.
From the guardian.co.uk
Gaga arrived at the Grammys in an egg to perform her latest hit, Born This Way.
From the kentucky.com
They'll be just as concerned about what consumers are going gaga for in Shanghai.
From the forbes.com
I was gaga from the beginning, and after 40 years I'm still gaga about the place.
From the usatoday.com
Hard-boiled columnists were absolutely gaga over the Cowboys early in the season.
From the dallasnews.com
Here was a man who was absolutely gaga about Jesus and didn't care who knew it.
From the washingtonpost.com
Her 2008 debut album, The Fame, has had the world going gaga for Gaga ever since.
From the time.com
Both big local PBS stations go gaga for you-know-which British soap this weekend.
From the newsday.com
More examples
Doddering: mentally or physically infirm with age; "his mother was doddering and frail"
Crazy: intensely enthusiastic about or preoccupied with; "crazy about cars and racing"; "he is potty about her"
In mathematics, algebraic geometry and analytic geometry are two closely related subjects. Where algebraic geometry studies algebraic varieties, analytic geometry deals with complex manifolds and the more general analytic spaces defined locally by the vanishing of analytic functions of several ...
Gaga is a technique (or "Movement Language") developed by Ohad Naharin for both dancers (those who perform) and for "regular" people (those who are dancing simply to better themselves).
Senile; Crazy; Infatuated
(GAGAS) Refer to GENERALLY ACCEPTED GOVERNMENT AUDITING STANDARDS.
An elimination game using a large sized rubber ball in an enclosed wooden polygon on the beach (confusing definition, easy game)