From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishcatatoniccat‧a‧ton‧ic /ˌkætəˈtɒnɪk◂ $ -ˈtɑː-/ adjective MInot able to move or talk because of an illness, shock etccatatonic stupor/trance
Examples from the Corpus
catatonic• More than once, for example, the machine has been rendered catatonic.• Some women and children have become exceptionally withdrawn or almost catatonic.• Not as catatonic as the viewers at home, I fear.• She was catatonic for over a year and did nothing to take care of the family.• Take the classic case, catatonic schizophrenia-okay?• Andrew was in a catatonic state for several months.• Some historians believe that Andrew fell into a catatonic state, was mistaken for dead, then buried.• When he was stressed he fell into a catatonic state.• They were catatonic with disgust.• Hadfield goes catatonic with terror, and is solicitously carried off to re-education in the jungle.