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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.
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  • 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
  • Testing the new bike in the dizzying mountains north of glamorous Monaco, all of these improvements came together beautifully. The Sun
  • Who could have predicted the dizzy pace of change in the country?
  • The Tourist was impressive ... but this is even better, a dazzling, dizzyingly complex world of clandestine warfare that is complicated further by the affairs of the heart. The Nearest Exit by Olen Steinhauer: Book summary
  • The prickling in my feet comes and goes, and I'm tippy and dizzy every so often, but nothing is too bad right now.
  • There were no technicians with the latest equipment waiting to help him decipher the coughs, bellyaches, chest pains, dizzy spells and fevers that ailed his patients.
  • Ferguson once coined the term "carousel" to describe Barca's dizzying passing game. The Seattle Times
  • Which, you know, doesn't do much for my maternal self-esteem, nor for my sense of myself as a functioning grown-up especially not when the lab-technicians/blood-letters get all finger-waggy on me for going dizzy on them without warning. Archive 2008-02-03
  • She stayed slouched down in her chair though, too dizzy to stand up at the moment.
  • His muse pullulated with dizzying speed.
  • My heart was pounding and I felt dizzy and nauseous. The Sun
  • As there be tides in the affairs of men which taken at the flood lead on to fortune, so there be waves which straddled at the proper time will bear a Halliwell on their niveous crest to the dizzy heights of fame, quicker'n the nictitation of a thomas-cat. The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 10
  • He was dizzy and nauseous. The Sun
  • The round, muted bluesy guitar is solid and unassuming until it explodes into a dizzying solo.
  • He explained: 'I felt a little bit dizzy. The Sun
  • The principal commodities were depth defensemen, who rotated among teams in a dizzy kaleidoscope, and some intriguing goalie switches.
  • Mr. Batiste made an unexpected entrance at about 10:30 p.m., striding in from the back of Dizzy's, leading his sextet to the stage as he chanted and played the melodica, a mouth-blown, hand-held mini-keyboard. Passing Down the Piano Torch Song
  • Why don't you pack in when you feel dizzy?
  • With dizzying speed, the tiny label almost single-handedly ignited the hip-hop revolution that made rap a household word.
  • I would sit with friends and watch what amounted to a dizzying haze of flashing light and colour. Times, Sunday Times
  • Just the other night I grew dizzy at the sight of a skelf in my husband's foot.
  • He still has no feeling in his left arm, has lost a stone in weight, has trouble with his balance, is susceptible to headaches, dizzy spells and tingles down his spine, arms and legs.
  • Young as she was, I was struck, throughout our little tour, with her confidence and courage with the way, in empty chambers and dull corridors, on crooked staircases that made me pause and even on the summit of an old machicolated square tower that made me dizzy, her morning music, her disposition to tell me so many more things than she asked, rang out and led me on. The Turn of the Screw
  • His head was still dizzy and his senses clouded, but one thing was for sure in his mind.
  • Doors have seldom opened and slammed shut with more dizzying rapidity in a stage farce. Times, Sunday Times
  • My foggy mind clouded my thoughts, the heavy music returning, making me feel dizzy as my head pounded.
  • As she lifted herself up from the computer console, walking towards her cabin in a dizzy, almost vertiginous way, she tripped on a sharp object.
  • Next season Must aim for dizzy heights of mid-table mediocrity next season. Times, Sunday Times
  • Why this dazzling and dizzying array of languages and voices?
  • In the period since Tony Blair took office in May 1997, anatomies of Britain have been tumbling from the presses in dizzying profusion.
  • I felt dizzy when I looked down from the top of the television tower.
  • He was a little bit dizzy, and is still a bit dizzy. Times, Sunday Times
  • It can make you sweat too, or feel dizzy or breathless. The Sun
  • We drove up the Arlberg Pass in Austria - the Hymer handled the dizzying hairpin turns like a dream - one Sunday and couldn't even get a parking spot in Lech, chockers with skiiers from Germany.
  • I was going for "boombox" on that red one, but that was after staring at it for 10 minutes and getting a little dizzy. Dastardly Dad Designs
  • The dervishes whirl around and around without getting dizzy
  • She said: 'I began to feel dizzy and drowsy. The Sun
  • He made her a cup of tea, which she claimed made her light-headed and dizzy.
  • Introducing Geoff's Earth-Fountain©: “it spits gravel and freshly tilled soil up into the air in dizzying patterns.” Archive 2005-10-01
  • So it is odd that you are still feeling dizzy. The Sun
  • The main selling point was the five unreleased songs recorded by a young New Jersey wannabe long before he scaled dizzying heights of fame. The Sun
  • While a solo binger will tend to underestimate his natural limits, a pair or group of lost weekenders can encourage, threaten and cajole each other to dizzying new heights of drunken tomfoolery.
  • The heat and the champagne made him feel dizzy .
  • At the first sign of feeling dizzy and ill, sit down and put your head between your knees. The Sun
  • Yet more of them leap up ever higher, their legs scissoring the air as they hover like so many hummingbirds in baggy T-shirts and tights, and a dozen or so pirouette dizzyingly, like human spinning tops.
  • The dizzying concoction of living in a moment that feels right or wrong and then being thrust ‘forward’ to the source of the decision that created that moment leaves the viewer in a constant state of unbalance.
  • But there are certain dizzy overtones to her narrative -- she only fell drunk into the orchestra pit once.
  • I asked them if they supposed a nation of people ever existed, who, with a free vote in every man's hand, would elect that a single family and its descendants should reign over it forever, whether gifted or boobies, to the exclusion of all other families -- including the voter's; and would also elect that a certain hundred families should be raised to dizzy summits of rank, and clothed on with offensive transmissible glories and privileges to the exclusion of the rest of the nation's families -- _including his own_. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, Part 3.
  • She hadn't even got out of bed when we arrived and so we left her to get herself mended and wandered off, in a dizzy haze towards the Putney Embankment.
  • The buyers, as it requires a dizzying peppertree at thousand hills branson of duck to remain houses, had to exclude teens who would expend them residential roofing at the lowest specimen noticeable in headache for a gleaming of thei. Wii-volution
  • The metamorphosis has happened with dizzying speed. Times, Sunday Times
  • One of the throw pillows had a honeycomb pattern that made me dizzy.
  • It does not, however, have to be a dizzying jumble of clutter.
  • TAKAHASHI: Their turf is less about sand and surf than the dizzying mix of a new urban America. Asian Hip-Hop Group Finds Fans Among L.A. Latinos
  • I felt faint and dizzy as if the sky and earth began to reel.
  • Even a dizzy blonde like Marilyn suggests something more spiritual with the sadness lurking behind her baby blues.
  • Much of the uncertainty surrounds the dizzying number of ways of qualifying for a provisional ballot, a sort of emergency ballot that allows voters to cast a vote at the polls, then have their eligibility checked after the election.
  • But take a look at that chart once more and tell me you don't feel a tiny bit dizzy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Far, far below in that dizzying space, she could see the sunray design of Central. Changeling
  • Seconds later the aircraft smacked into the deck and was violently restrained as its arrestor hook caught, the deceleration dizzying. Times, Sunday Times
  • Up here, suspended dizzyingly more than 100 feet above the ground, it is easy to see how the great stone buttresses that support the magnificent cathedral have been eroded by time.
  • Jocko Homo" spirited the crowd into a marketing dream come true vocal chant ( "We are Devo!"), and the punkish "Mongoloid" gave the hopping crowd a dizzying dancing beat. All articles at Blogcritics
  • When a panic attack strikes, most likely your heart pounds and you may feel sweaty, weak, faint, or dizzy.
  • The shock comes when examining the dizzying lifts and the resultant poundage totals the duo has achieved.
  • There follows a dizzying array of rooms. Times, Sunday Times
  • The pure and fine essential qualities of the voices, the dizzying harmonies, the fugal calls and responses, the strange relief of the unisons, and above all the free, natural mien of the singers, proudly aware that they were producing something beautiful that could not be produced more beautifully, conscious of unchallenged supremacy, -- all this enfevered him to an unprecedented and self-astonished enthusiasm. Clayhanger
  • Watching him bat even as he was being honoured took the crowd's enthusiasm to dizzying heights.
  • As all this occurs, his narrative voice partakes in dizzying peregrinations into alliteration and poetic eloquence as he discusses the failure of language in doing justice to the comic's visuals.
  • Wouldn't that be egg all over the face of the dizzy-eyed coxcomb of a Prime Minister.
  • The rooms are stylish and funky - all have a view of the emerald lagoon - and there is a spa with a dizzying number of treatments. The Sun
  • The Nahuas also apparently believed that chocolate, especially in its green or unroasted form, could intoxicate its drinker: "when much drunk ... [it] makes one drunk, takes effect on one, makes one dizzy, confuses one, makes one sick, deranges one. Pestilence and Headcolds: Encountering Illness in Colonial Mexico
  • South of that lies the corrie of the pap, Coire na Ciche, taking its name the great rock that gazes down into the dizzy depths below.
  • If you feel faint, sweaty, dizzy or confused you may be suffering from an insulin reaction.
  • After my railing at Dirty Dorries aka Nadine the ex-German BIGOT and TORY MP yesterday Dizzy has found this You Tube gem in his early hours caravan of love, hate and whimsy. Archive 2007-04-15
  • I was dizzy, confused and unable to string sensible sentences together. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some may feel anxious, restless, irritable or dizzy. Working with Teenagers
  • Being so close to him made her feel slightly dizzy - in a pleasurable way.
  • It glowed like a muffled torch and stretched upward to a dizzy height toward the zenith. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • Annie's head ached, her ribs hurt from coughing, and the simple act of craning her neck to peer through a clear spot on the windshield made her dizzy.
  • So it is odd that you are still feeling dizzy. The Sun
  • He has guested on records by Sting, George Michael and Carmel and played with jazz greats like Dizzy Gillespie, Gil Evans, Clark Terry and Quincy Jones.
  • He left the room and I lay back as the dizzy feeling returned.
  • Check with your pastor, local bookstore, or librarian to sort through the dizzying array of commentaries available. Christianity Today
  • This was an event that took the television ratings of the state-owned channel to dizzying heights.
  • He was feeling dizzy, unsteady. Christianity Today
  • Coiled in on herself, Chesarynth reeled dizzy across her endless night.
  • I would sit with friends and watch what amounted to a dizzying haze of flashing light and colour. Times, Sunday Times
  • The premises we raided were a fraudster's utopia, with a dizzying array of machines and gadgets designed to commit serious fraud. Times, Sunday Times
  • The idea made her dizzy, so she jumped into a complicated explanation of the Higgs boson that soon left him behind. NOBODY'S BABY BUT MINE
  • It's a herky-jerky journey - some of it fascinating, much of it dizzyingly random - as eccentric and chaotic as a lost-and-found bin. Undone by a house of dreams
  • He felt himself go dizzy, and had to put his head against a pillow slowly, closing his eyes and gulping nervously, not daring to move, in case he woke her up.
  • Do you think Tess will reach the dizzy heights of Senior Editor before she's 30?
  • If you become dizzy or faint while sitting, take several deep breaths and bend forward with your head between your knees.
  • ‘Yes, please,’ she rejoined as she looked over a revolving metal stand proffering a dizzying assortment of Rasta-style knit tams.
  • He took Becki's hands in his and they whirled round and round, until Becki felt rather dizzy.
  • But when he hits the frightening climax, the camera swerves at dizzying angles, the sound desynchs, and the makeup and sets become highly expressionistic.
  • Think of had to meet, like very dizzy, when the mind change, such as.
  • Many neurologic disorders affecting the brain stem, cerebellum, and spinal cord posterior column may cause dizzy sensations.
  • For mile after mile, we zoomed past dizzying summits and breathtaking lakes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Interestingly, when he was thrown from a horse back in 1989, his wife noticed that he got a little dizzy one morning and he had a little bit of what they called a subdural hematoma. CNN Transcript Jun 7, 2004
  • I become dizzy and faint when I walk past them because the urge to knock them over is so unbelievably strong. Times, Sunday Times
  • I say, if you want to know where jazz is going, listen to a Bugge Wesseltoft record (it used to be _listen to a Miles Davis record_ but he's in heaven with Dizzy and the Duke). 5 solid stars. Latest reviews @ Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website
  • And now its the weekend, although the dizzy blonde has no friends about and no money to spend.
  • I had a few dizzy spells and moments of acute nausea but gradually began to feel better.
  • Three weeks along and I am some way from producing a dizzyingly lovely stream of fingerpicking wizardry.
  • He was nauseated, short of breath, dizzy and drenched in perspiration.
  • The ebb and flow of people around me was almost dizzying.
  • He's been a bit dizzy and confused since the accident. Do you think it's mild concussion?
  • It can make you sweat too, or feel dizzy or breathless. The Sun
  • An elaborate mantelpiece framed the hearth in a dizzying array of swirls and curlicues, and a tall grandfather clock lurked in the corner like a brooding sentry, counting out the seconds with a gloomy tock, tock, tock.
  • He has a dizzying array of possessions that carry his initials embossed on them.
  • Either side, water plummets over the dizzying drop in great cascading sheets, crashing down on the rocks far below.
  • A shaky laugh bubbles past his lips, and dizzy words start tumbling out of him.
  • A whirling flash of sapphire suddenly rotated --- in a delirious foxtrot --- with Doc's own dizzy nimbus of gilded amber. BEHINDLINGS
  • He brakes once more, guns the engine a final time - and we race off across the roof of the Big Top, the floor dizzyingly far below, and come to a screaming stop, high above the ground on the far side.
  • By day, as a student living with his genteel hosts, he cultivates the persona of a bookish young man given to headaches and dizzy spells.
  • Backing up would have been the sensible option, but a dizzy blonde is never one to possess much common sense…
  • The captain of the flight reported feeling dizzy and groggy and, at one point, donned an oxygen mask.
  • I was a bit dizzy but otherwise alright. The Sun
  • The "strobe" effect will make everyone in the room dizzy and sick. Latest Articles
  • But the effect of these changes in gear can be dizzying and the rush between perspectives often feels forced. The Times Literary Supplement
  • One of the trolls said something about “activist judges” and I got dizzy from the staggering display of stupidity so close to their beloved ACTIVIST SUPREME COURT deciding corporations have more rights than citizens. Think Progress » DeMint Blocks A Wise Lesbian Latina From Serving On The D.C. Superior Court
  • It is a dizzy place, with views that stretch across layer upon layer of mountain ridges. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's a strange feeling seeing something like that, a kind of disembodiment, and I felt dizzy. Associated Writing
  • A whirling flash of sapphire suddenly rotated --- in a delirious foxtrot --- with Doc's own dizzy nimbus of gilded amber. BEHINDLINGS
  • It's taken me to the dizzy heights of success one day only to drag me down to the depths of despair the next.
  • Helen tried to remember, fighting off the dizzy sleepiness. THE GOLDEN LION
  • My head started spinning, and for a dizzying moment, my hands disobediently came up to grip his arms.
  • A collection of songs about love and loss which takes the form to new places and dizzying heights. The Sun
  • He was a little bit dizzy, and is still a bit dizzy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Instantly his ears popped, and the pressure drained out of his head in a dizzying rush.
  • The final alcove was jam-packed with works that add travel snapshots and promotional photographs, either enlarged or regular size, to the dizzying mix.
  • For a lot of people, positing a deity is a pretty straightforward form of inference to the best explanation — and for a lot of our history, given the dizzying complexity of the natural world, it was scarcely an unreasonable hypothesis. When Faith Isn’t
  • This is a Northern European mongrel of dizzy lo-fi with pop hooks to help you escape the everyday.
  • But today's most exciting trends tend to erupt, rather than trickle down; they come and go with dizzying alacrity.
  • I got dizzy with the smell of the dust and the noise of the gunfire, and I prayed not to faint.
  • The question alone was enough to make me dizzy. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is a world of difference between reintegrative shaming and hounding people for offensive behaviour from a dizzy moral height and a concealed political agenda. Mail & Guardian Online
  • Do you think Tess will reach the dizzy heights of Senior Editor before she's 30?
  • Sorry for waxing wroth, kiddo," I added, dizzy from too much oxygen. AFTER ALL THESE YEARS
  • After a good twenty minutes in one of these megastores, however, experience tells that the dizzy anticipation is usually replaced by just plain dizziness.
  • Since there was nobetter yesterdaythey had fallowed merely their own tails until becoming dizzy. A Mess
  • One gets the dizzying sense that futures are being rewritten before our eyes. Times, Sunday Times
  • I felt dizzy from standing so quickly when I had gotten out of bed.
  • He felt sick and dizzy and then passed out.
  • Looking at them made me feel dizzy and sick. The Sun
  • The gecko glowered at Nawin with appetite and fixed interest as if he were an esculent appetize -- the gecko crawling on the railing of the BTS Skytrain station looking down at the small womanly morsels and traffic below and amorous Nawin doing the same but as he glanced up dizzyingly at the facade of the colossal Intercontinental Hotel with its eerie pale-blue light diffused throughout, he felt like he was falling into a deep - blue eternal space. An Apostate: Nawin of Thais
  • He was nauseated, short of breath, dizzy and drenched in perspiration.
  • The whispers in the walls were sending me slowly crazy, and the constant whirring of my empty mind made me feel dizzy.
  • It makes you dizzy and your head pound. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sir, his definement suffers no perdition in you; — though, I know, to divide him inventorially, would dizzy the arithmetick of memory; and yet but raw neither, in respect of his quick sail. The plays of William Shakespeare. In fifteen volumes. With the corrections and illustrations of various commentators
  • He's been a bit dizzy and confused since the accident. Do you think it's mild concussion?
  • By the time Bugs Bunny picks his way through the smoking wreckage to have the last word in your shell-like, the dizzying accretion of events has pulled you through so many emotional states you might not even know what day it is.
  • He lives amidst a dizzying array of objects: church fixtures, toys, beads, bottle caps, dolls' heads, icons, candles and dominoes.
  • As for Andy's suggestion of the possibility of losing the story if Downing Street were prewarned, I have great faith in Dizzy's ability to keep records. Has Downing Street put anonymous security officer at risk?
  • It was during that festival that she teamed up with the great bebop trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie - pictured here, looking knackered but resplendent in his newly acquired tartan trousers - at the Central Hotel.
  • The dizzy spell effect, called orthostatic hypotension, is especially common among the elderly. The Sun
  • It was a show of constant, dizzying extremes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Subjectively, this manifests itself in the perception that the "feelings" elicited by art and music are in fact the ACTUAL feelings the artist felt, somehow, dizzyingly 'captured' by the work, immortalized, held in 'static communion' by the canvas, or musical recording, or camera... and now able to enrapture and enchant us indefinitely. Jason Silva: On Creativity, Marijuana and "a Butterfly Effect in Thought"
  • Prosecutors allege Poole finally told the truth - that she became dizzy and lost her grip on the girl's ankles during a spinning game she called "whirlybird" and Allison fell off a balcony to the first floor. The End of the Story
  • Do you think Tess will reach the dizzy heights of Senior Editor before she's 30?
  • Each week, the show took them and viewers on an emotional and mind-bending roller coaster ride, through a dizzying loop of supernatural forces, armed conspirators and, of course, romance.
  • I say, if you want to know where jazz is going, listen to a Bugge Wesseltoft record (it used to be _listen to a Miles Davis record_ but he's in heaven with Dizzy and the Duke). 5 solid stars. Latest reviews @ Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website
  • By the time she had explained to Pepe what had happened she began to feel dizzy and steadily more nauseous.
  • She stood up, feeling a bit dizzy, and closed her eyes until she recuperated the balance.
  • His vision was nearly back to normal, the dizzy spells happened only infrequently.
  • Heather Jenkins displayed a dizzyingly high soprano in the fairy lullaby; mezzo Kristin Vienneau brought sparkle to other fairy solo moments. A Remarkably Inventive A Cappella Premiere
  • 'Sometimes,' she said, 'when I was that dizzy from the heat of the cooking that if I didn't take a breath of fresh air I'd faint, I'd stick my head out of the kitchen window, and close my eyes and see most wonderful things. The Night-Born
  • It can make you sweat too, or feel dizzy or breathless. The Sun
  • From washing the town's soiled linen to loaning it money was a change so sudden and radical that the rise made him dizzy; he was apt, therefore, to be a little erratic, his manner varying during a single conversation from the cold austerity of a bloodless capitalist to the free and easy democracy of the days when he had stood in the doorway of his laundry in his undershirt and "joshed" the passersby. The Fighting Shepherdess
  • A person will feel slightly nauseous, dizzy and irritable. Times, Sunday Times
  • If his condition is temporary, a Southerner might call him swimmy-headed, meaning dizzy. How to Speak American
  • I tried not to think about it so much because it made my head all dizzy.
  • For a moment she felt dizzy with a heady mix of guilt and fear. Burning Bright
  • Yet over the years, the festival has expanded from one small venue to its current reach, four auditoria scattered throughout the city (though all of the theaters are confined to the city's downtown area), hosting a dizzying number of offerings. GreenCine Daily: PIFF Dispatch. 1.
  • The idea has gone from inconceivable to quite possible at dizzying speed. Times, Sunday Times
  • If you are walking outdoors on a 37 degrees centigrade day and suddenly feel weak, dizzy and nauseous chances are you are suffering from heat exhaustion.
  • So far his list includes: fear of being trapped (claustrophobia), fear of dolls (pediophobia), and fear of ladders (stepnophobia) -- also entomophobia, illyngophobia and sitophobia (insects, dizzyness and eating, respectively). Lila Shapiro: Kiss the Bloody Rabbit: Inside New York's Most Unsettling Haunted House (PHOTOS)
  • As the manufacturing sector continues to grow at a dizzying rate, this is creating a bottleneck in the fast lane of economic development and is an even more pressing problem than power shortages.
  • Why we like him: Stunned Man (2004) features a dizzyingly brilliant absurdist slapstick routine in which a poker-faced guy destroys his apartment, dives into the bathroom mirror and reappears through the door to begin the whole process afresh. Artist of the week 110: Julian Rosefeldt
  • What with the stuffiness of the room I'd been in and now the shouting I was beginning to feel dizzy. THE EXECUTION
  • The South that she wrote about — the South of snuff-dipping poor whites, evasively sweet-talking Negroes, and sunken-eyed back woods prophets — was undergoing a dizzying transformation even as she (a contemporary and qualified admirer of Martin Luther King, Jr.) was writing about it on an electric typewriter. Flannery O'Connor's Gifts
  • When the camera shifts to what the actors can see, the audience gets dizzy views of the surroundings, thus augmenting the overwhelming panic that fuels this film.
  • A collection of songs about love and loss which takes the form to new places and dizzying heights. The Sun
  • Her head still hurt, and she felt slightly dizzy and disoriented.
  • After drinking too much wine, and finding it a little difficult to type, the dizzy blonde returns to ponder the biggest, most unanswerable question of all, in every situation.
  • Okay, so you are not plug-ugly and you don't find it impossible to lure women into your dizzying orbit, but just what is it about you that turns out to be so utterly repellent?
  • The dizzying pace of political change in the country caught many people by surprise.
  • The latest data point that's got the doubters in a dizzy is a new LA Times poll that shows that Kerry's slipped a couple of points in the wake of the Swift Boat Liars leaky raft. I can't believe...
  • To catch you if you get dizzy. A Plague of Angels
  • They have three or four of these episodes a year when they feel dizzy or faint, but they just pick themselves up and carry on.

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