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[ US /ˈdɪzi/ ]
[ UK /dˈɪzi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. having or causing a whirling sensation; liable to falling
    had a dizzy spell
    a dizzy pinnacle
    had a headache and felt giddy
    a vertiginous climb up the face of the cliff
    a giddy precipice
    feeling woozy from the blow on his head
  2. lacking seriousness; given to frivolity
    silly giggles
    light-headed teenagers
    a dizzy blonde
VERB
  1. make dizzy or giddy
    a dizzying pace

How To Use dizzy In A Sentence

  • In the curtain-raiser Federals put in a spirited performance against South in a match which didn't reach any dizzy heights in terms of skill, but held a level of entertainment value.
  • Sir, his definement suffers no perdition in you; though, I know, to divide him inventorially would dizzy the arithmetic of memory, and yet but yaw neither, in respect of his quick sail. Act V. Scene II. Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
  • It can make you sweat too, or feel dizzy or breathless. The Sun
  • Does household cleaning give you headaches, nausea, dizzy spells or sign irritations?
  • As with all Dizzy games, Crystal Kingdom is jam-packed with perplexing puzzles to solve.
  • Whatever the cause, I felt dizzy, and without any bearings or footholds.
  • A whirling flash of sapphire suddenly rotated --- in a delirious foxtrot --- with Doc's own dizzy nimbus of gilded amber. BEHINDLINGS
  • Dizzy was a real killer on the trumpet.
  • And what caps this dizzy display is not seriously ordered fugato, let alone a full fugue, but a comically stilted allegro dance in duple rhythm, with octave leaps, mostly in two parts with chordal intrusions.
  • Like "just A moment," the album sees the act expanding the posthardcore sounds that dominated their early releases. "shandy" starts as an experimental pop song filled with dizzying distorted noises and then morphs into a dramatic rocker. "this is is this?" is the disc's most dynamic composition. Japan News latest RSS headlines - The Japan News.Net
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