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How To Use Heady In A Sentence

  • As he rode along the lanes, his nostrils filled with the heady scent of elderflowers, and the air was alive with stag beetles whose chunky black bodies whirred defiantly through the dusk.
  • Served rare, the meat of squab is a heady delicacy, both earthy and elegant.
  • The most sumptuous and heady of fragrances, these feature exotic flowers like Bulgarian rose, jasmine and tuberose, as well as mysterious musks, woods and other exotic essences.
  • The exhibit at 1500 Gallery shows photojournalism from the heady 1950s when the instant city of Brasilia rose up out of the South American desert draws distinct parallels between then and now. J. Michael Welton: Toward an Instant City
  • Like lily, lotus tends to be metallic and headachingly heady on me. Archive 2007-02-01
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  • The heady feeling of power from a new outfit was better than anything the doctor could prescribe for you. JUST BETWEEN US
  • Drank too much wine, too much whiskey, too much heady Norwegian cognac.
  • The end result recalls the heady absurdism of Richard Lester's "A Hard Day's Night" (1964) spiked with Eastern antagonisms. Not for the Faint of Heart
  • Just as academe got bashed for appropriating jazz, this show will face criticism for its heady approach.
  • He's going to replace the heady sauce and the imported cheese with processed Swiss and a ready-pack version of remoulade.
  • Fortunately their heady, heavenly aroma more than compensates for their physical unattractiveness. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is, after all, the Internet - a heady mixture of commerce, education, infotainment, tricksters, agendas, games and entertainment.
  • Side-by-side (it takes barely half an hour to get from one to the other) are the sybaritic pleasures of the beach and the heady exertions of the sort of outdoor life enjoyed by the Von Trapp family.
  • In these heady days of professionalism, enjoying your sport and respecting your opposition are all too rare.
  • It's all very big and heady - the world of abstract construction - but it's child's play, really.
  • But you get what you pay for - chunks of Maine lobster astride poached eggs and croissants, with lemon hollandaise and wilted spinach ($25) or a heady omelet "bearnaise Denver Post: News: Breaking: Local
  • In the heady days of 2006 and 2007, investors often asked Mr. Thin questions about less-familiar currencies such as the Ukrainian hryvnia and Romanian leu, but the inquiries stopped abruptly when the global recession made investors wary about taking on riskier assets. 'Frontier' Markets Ahead For Currency Investors?
  • In our heady economic comfort, we have lived alone and let our neighbor die.
  • Since then there has been a Piano Concerto in C minor, theme music for any situation requiring a sufficiently heady mixture of passion and gloom.
  • Days can be spent foraging for mushrooms for dinner or boating on the lake, while the town's spa and casino from its heady days are still open. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was the THIRD time in a week that the total spent hit heady new heights. The Sun
  • Especially this song - it's got this dreamy vibe that makes you feel all heady. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Pilbara is gentle and serene in a good Wet, with spinifex waving like wheat on the flats and the heady smell of fresh country.
  • Enjoy them with Cassis wine of which there are only 14 producers, a heady blend of marsanne, clairette and ugni blanc, and not to be confused with the blackcurrant crème de cassis. Budget wine trips in France
  • Once he heard that, he seemed to lose interest in Swindon Usain Bolt's ex-lover Gemma Jones recalls their heady days together This week: George Osborne, Katrin Radmacher and Wayne Rooney
  • The three young protagonists are students in these heady yet harsh times.
  • A heady scent of newly mown hay and honeysuckle wafted in through the open window. Times, Sunday Times
  • Vera Wilde is a fable about the way society eats its heroes, "Shotgun Players founder Patrick Dooley quoted director Maya Gurantz's anthropophagic line when introducing Chris Jeffries 'heady musical on opening night. The Berkeley Daily Planet, The East Bay's Independent Newspaper
  • Aristaenetus the Nicaean said, that he remembered he had read somewhere that sweet things mixed with wine make it less heady, and that some physicians prescribe to one that hath drunk freely, before he goes to bed, a crust of bread dipped in honey. Symposiacs
  • Lavender is perfect for a summer afternoon, but a moonlit evening calls for the heady scent of gardenia or tuberose.
  • But he has a couple of outstanding players under his control and they will combine with the younger starlets and a heady team unity to make the Londoners a difficult team to beat.
  • Alas, for every valuable insight which emerges, we find a greater proportion of heady rhetoric and circumlocution.
  • We were further lulled into peace by the hypnotic clonking of their bells and the heady perfumes of alpine flowers.
  • Once considered a low class hooch, tequila has undergone a huge image change over the past two decades to become the toast of Mexican high society, giving a heady euphoria to the country's drinks industry.
  • The organisers, Chalachitra Film Society, which have their fingers on the pulse of movie buffs hereabouts, seem to have come up with a combination of ‘heavy’ and ‘heady’ fare.
  • Thus, to dismiss writer-director Darren Aronofsky's hyper-ambitious third feature The Fountain - a heady fusion of science fiction, metaphysics and a melodramatic quest for immortality both romantic and spiritual - for simply believing in its own sentimental grandiloquence is to deny one of the most exquisite and strangely moving trips to the multiplex this year. GreenCine Daily: Interview. Darren Aronofsky.
  • The white stinkwood trees are in bud at the moment, and the wild sage shrub is about to burst into bloom - you'll know them from their heady scent.
  • All of which makes, of course, for a heady mix: the world groaning into wakefulness, the ice splitting, the tubers stirring, and the whole cosmic rhythm incorporated into a scene of priests solemnifying the return of the light of the world. BREAKFAST WITH SOCRATES
  • He did not want the ‘brainsick and heady preachers,’ but welcomed ‘the learned and grave men of both sides.’
  • The heady scent of hot spices restored the sense of relaxation that moment in the cloakroom had nearly undone.
  • Much of it sounds like a throwback to the heady days of the Sixties but also infused with cool, contemporary flourishes. The Sun
  • The result is an eminently readable account that captures the spirit of those heady days.
  • Further south the heady brew is cognac, aged in oak casks and sought out by connoisseurs around the world.
  • The 1960s saw, however, a heady boom in self-build, initiated by all those alternative lifestyle movements. Junkitecture and the Jellyfish theatre
  • Like a weak version of cocaine or amphetamine, alcohol boosts dopamine levels, producing a brief period of heady stimulation.
  • On the other hand, I also remember attending San Francisco Opera as a standee when I was a student and it was quite an exciting and heady experience. Susanne Mentzer: Facing the Music
  • But in every generation, it seems, they try, remembering not the fall, but the heady lift of flight, the eagle soaring by.
  • Somehow, he has traded this parlous position for the heady anticipation of today. Times, Sunday Times
  • This heady union, which begat gay liberation, has been all but ignored by the culture.
  • Since the heady first days after the mammoth's helicopter flight, the prospect of a reborn race of woollies someday emerging from the ice cave has receded further and further into the distance.
  • Days can be spent foraging for mushrooms for dinner or boating on the lake, while the town's spa and casino from its heady days are still open. Times, Sunday Times
  • The atmosphere at home was a heady mix of bookish culture, genteel poverty and violence.
  • The people of the new century found pragmatism a heady wine. The American Nation: A History of the United States to 1877
  • It is heady, too, and strong: sheen, dah, tah, noon, reh, zein, sounds that brook no spill of liquid before their heat, threaten any lilting sibilance to vapour and smoke if it should come too near. Eeeee! Art!
  • To capture this took a heady mix of patient cameramen, infra-red cameras and ultra high-speed video.
  • It is heady, too, and strong: sheen, dah, tah, noon, reh, zein, sounds that brook no spill of liquid before their heat, threaten any lilting sibilance to vapour and smoke if it should come too near. Eeeee! Art!
  • His punishment was fittingly double, for not only did the referee see and declare the foul, but the big Palatine came with such impetus that he knocked Heady galley-west. The Dozen from Lakerim
  • If the humanities wish to recharge their words with fizz (the ultimate is Joyce in Finnegans Wake), they should go directly to an etymologic dictionary, not to the taxonomic sciences to discover the heady truth in Emerson's "Every word was once a poem. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIV No 1
  • House-buying is like drinking wine-it can be heady stuff.
  • Since those heady days the bar and its clientele have undergone a transformation.
  • He recalls the heady days of their early relationship: "Our minds moved fast and at that point in sync. Tony Blair's memoirs: Gordon Brown holds fire over old rival's criticisms
  • Who but the dourest of indie-snob purists could fail to succumb to its heady delights?
  • SoS is into some seriously weirdo electro-based crunked up stuff - MCs Johan, Marcus and Gesan providing bizarre flow over heady, 8-bit electronic beats and vicious synths, and in the case of this track some more strange elements like some kind of (real or synth?) flute ... weird, seriously weird. Music (For Robots): October 2005 Archives
  • Much of it sounds like a throwback to the heady days of the Sixties but also infused with cool, contemporary flourishes. The Sun
  • The temptation to let the heady ecstasy of power get the better of you is self-evident.
  • Divorcing it of its context would strip away much of that heady period glamour to produce a diluted facsimile - even with slavish adherence to the original scripts.
  • Dine on a menu of pickled rollmops, grilled gurnard fillet and ginger three ways pudding, then toast Charles Dickens with a heady alcoholic punch. Evening Standard - Home
  • Flowers of many varieties have a fragrance so heady that they're used to make potpourri, soap, and perfume; some are also used in cooking.
  • The restaurant is warm and welcoming, an open kitchen fires out heady fumes of garlic, the servers are friendly and helpful, and the prices are great.
  • Bird vigorously pushed a heady mix of laborism and state capitalism that came to be known locally as milk and water socialism.
  • I'm going back to my desk to continue inhaling the intoxicating, heady scent of my new PC.
  • Accessible only by a dirt path which runs off a single track road, it's about as far from the heady glamour of Hollywood as you can imagine.
  • Further investment in players may improve their weak defence or thin squad, but would disrupt the team spirit which has thus far carried them to the heady heights of fourth.
  • Rip Rig created a heady hybrid out of the bare bones of jazz improvisation, dub-funk rhythms and punk attitude.
  • There was a heady aroma in the air, of new-mown hay, of the breeze after a rain, of every flower in the world in bloom at the same time. Tran Siberian
  • Every year the city abandons itself to the heady allure of the world's largest arts festival.
  • She remembered the huge house filled with flowers, the servants all dressed in black, and the heady perfume of the early spring narcissi, which lay strewn in piles upon the coffin. Storyteller
  • The heady progress of Liszt's career was brought to an abrupt halt by the unexpected death of his father in 1827.
  • At the moment, it is festooned with masses of clusters of white flowers which give a thick, heady scent.
  • Further south the heady brew is cognac, aged in oak casks and sought out by connoisseurs around the world.
  • There are a number of items which critics of President Bush's "Faith Based and Community Initiatives" program usually bring up, namely the heady Church v. State dilemma inherent to the program itself. Michael Standaert: Social Entrepreneurship and Alternatives to Faith-Based Welfare ...
  • For example, early-flowering hyacinths offer a heady and fragrant choice for planting in containers along walkways and at entrances.
  • A hundred days have swept past in a heady parade of media applause, a new baby, a divided Labour party and humiliated Liberal Democrats.
  • As heady as the fragrance of crushed tansy came the steady honking of grey geese announcing their return. Raven Speak
  • That kind of heady wordplay isn't always consistent or accessible, yet it generates excitement with every vivid line.
  • But he also agreed readily with my contention that such heady episodes have been a millstone. Times, Sunday Times
  • The sunlight performing magic, shimmering, flickering through the tree tops, and the smell, the warm autumny scent, making you feel heady. TravelPod.com Recent Updates
  • The indigestion from those heady days will no doubt be long and painful in this downturn. Times, Sunday Times
  • A heady, often impenetrable mix of shrubs, herbs and wild flowers, such as lavender, myrtle, marjoram and thyme, its elusive scent permeates everything from the wine to the honey.
  • The trick he arrived at was mating a synthetic called ionone, which, as far as he knew, had only been used to make the scent of violets, and Hedione (the trade name for the synthetic molecule methyl dihydrojasmonate, originally found in jasmine), a heady, ethereal, glowing smell. University Diaries
  • Add a heady half-bottle of Siduri Pinot Noir or a complex, herbal Artadi Vinas de Gain Rioja, and contentment is bound to ensue.
  • The film is a difficult sell with too much action blockbuster for heady purists, too much intelligence for popcorn escapists.
  • But in every generation, it seems, they try, remembering not the fall, but the heady lift of flight, the eagle soaring by.
  • Once those heady days came to an end, I had the money and the time to indulge myself. Times, Sunday Times
  • While another strong contender for best track on the album is Black Mountain, a haunting ballad built around a strong acoustic guitar riff and some heady stabs of violin.
  • The sparkle going on between us was light and fun and heady and I knew I was safe to be cheeky, personal, as if we had known each other for weeks.
  • A heady scent of newly mown hay and honeysuckle wafted in through the open window. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her heady, hypnotic drumming intensifies both the mood and pace.
  • Having grown up during the heady days of the late 1990s, they think the current period is an aberration.
  • We also have nine silvers and eight bronzes, keeping us in a heady third place on the medals table. The Sun
  • I love heady, sexy scents like jasmine and neroli. Linda Rodin
  • All those hops and yeast and good times belching from the chimney stacks would definitely account for that heady aroma.
  • Profumo is Italian for scent, which gives the fallen political star a whiff of Ben Jonson: he caught the heady intoxication of cheap perfume one summer’s night, and, though he swapped his evening dress for a hair shirt, he understood the smell could never be washed out. Making the Best of a Sticky Wicket
  • Those who experienced the heady days of pre-revolutionary Egypt will still long for that Arcadia of cultural refinement and social adroitness. On the Eastern Shore
  • Thought I'd really immerse myself in the culture of the town .... spent most of my time eating a heady mix of cashew nuts, grilled matoke (plaintains, raw banana) and having some serengeti beer. TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
  • It is made in exactly the same way as the Italian zabaglione - where the wine is usually the rich and heady Marsala.
  • For a moment she felt dizzy with a heady mix of guilt and fear. Burning Bright
  • The heady feeling of power from a new outfit was better than anything the doctor could prescribe for you. JUST BETWEEN US
  • George Will takes three lessons from Wisconsin, and puts Walker in some very heady company: Walker's calm comportment in this crisis is reminiscent of President Reagan's during his 1981 stand against the illegal strike by air traffic controllers, and Margaret Thatcher's in the 1984 showdown with the miners' union over whether unions or Parliament would govern Britain. Wonkbook: Are Republicans overreaching? Or just negotiating effectively?
  • Apparently it is a heady mix of desperation with underlying scents of money and old rope topped off with the faint whiff of sanctimonious windbaggery.
  • Their exhibit of photojournalism from the heady 1950s when the instant city of Brasilia rose up out of the South American desert draws distinct parallels between then and now. J. Michael Welton: Toward an Instant City
  • The heady floral scent of rose and heartsease, plus the spice of yemonja root. Night World No. 1
  • A heady mix of shopping, eating and entertainment options has turned malls across the US into similar tourism magnets and coined the phrase "destination malls. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • As yet nobody knows, but I am no less optimistic now than I was in those heady days at Treasury.
  • Tony Curtis (sword glint of light off teeth) and Natalie Wood, beautiful in white tulle (lungs not yet waterlogged) in heady love. Unmanned
  • A heady mix of coconut, pineapple, vanilla and banana, and it's yours for only a quid.
  • Almost as well-known as the mischievous re-touchings of the surrealist painters, the heady prose description by Walter Pater was considered by WB Yeats to be so original and poetic that he lineated it himself so as to form the opening "poem" of his 1936 anthology, The Oxford Book of Modern Verse: "She is older than the rocks among which she sits;/Like the Vampire/She has been dead many times … Blogposts | guardian.co.uk
  • It was all pretty heady stuff. The Sun
  • Morbid states of passion, the hectic bloom of fever, heady perfumes of the Orient and the tropics; the bitter-sweet blossom of love; forced fruits of the hot-house (_serres chaudes_); the iridescence of standing pools; the fungoidal growths of decay; such are some of the hackneyed metaphors which render the impression of this neo-romantic poetry. A History of English Romanticism in the Nineteenth Century
  • It was a very heady experience -- I was not yet twenty. ONE HUNDRED DAYS
  • Things are not quite so heady just yet around south west Scotland, as Donna readily acknowledges.
  • These are heady days for one of the most popular jockeys in the weighing room. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pretty heady stuff for a freshman....
  • It's heady material, but the site does a brave job of making the business of elementary particles, accelerators, detectors and collision exercises comprehensible to a general audience.
  • I pulled my boyfriend away, pressing my face into his beautiful black hair, breathing in the heady scent of pine needles.
  • The heady air was filled with exotic fragrances of spices laced with the pungent aroma of seething humanity. Times, Sunday Times
  • Edward's breath on Bella's face is a heady, intoxicating experience, and Edward is knocked nearly senseless by Bella's smell, which he describes as floral, "like lavender ... or freesia. True Love Waits
  • The 100g bar of Chocolat Noir, which I scoffed in one heady moment of shameless indulgence, was chock-a-block with cocoa solids - a whopping 76 per cent.
  • Metallic mosaic tiles, opulently draped curtains, and fringed rugs and throws all contributed to the heady and exotic effect of an Ali Baba cave.
  • Since those heady days, the trade union has seen a sharp decline in popularity and membership as well as bitter divisions among former friends and comrades.
  • STB has the press packet from the event posted -- it's pretty heady stuff, especially since the mayor has found a way to solve the problem that "In King County, African-Americans are 60 percetn (sic) more likely to be obese". “Walk Bike Ride” Plan Would Narrow Nickerson for Bikes « PubliCola
  • These were heady, intoxicating days, when Edinburgh in August was the place to be.
  • By yesterday morning the temperature was still firmly below zero but a rare spirit of solidarity and optimism, redolent of the heady days of eastern Europe's liberation in 1989, had taken hold.
  • It is the latest in town and a deadly and rather heady combination of coffee and vodka.
  • The first couple of newies - Weeds and Birds In Your Garden - seem to be more optimistic than anything from last time round, although they later trot out intoxicatingly heady versions of The Fear and This Is Hardcore.
  • There was a strange, heady scent of perfume and hot wax. Times, Sunday Times
  • It has been six heady years, not quite so heady as it was in the glorious days when my life story was serialised in the paper, but quite fun just the same.
  • Those heady days when six diners had a dinner costing 44,000 are long gone. Times, Sunday Times
  • Heady lyrics, set to folkish classical lilt, sung vibrantly by Kalapini Komkali, Shruti Sadolikar, Bela Shende or Hariharan cast spells.
  • In these heady days of professionalism, enjoying your sport and respecting your opposition are all too rare.
  • Soon that odour will disappear under the heady scent of rotting refuse.
  • It was a heady time to be young when anything seemed possible.
  • Our most unusual New Year's Eve was in those heady, pre-parenting days when my husband whisked me off to Amsterdam for what Bridget Jones would call a mini-break.
  • At other times, dozens of them are laid on top of each other, creating not a rational counterpoint but instead the heady glossolalia of nature.
  • He often uses as many slices, dinks and touch shots as he does conventional topspin drives, and sometimes this heady brew turns out to be too clever for its own good.
  • Best of all is a simple tamale, dense masa dough sheltering lightly seasoned roast pork and wrapped in a corn husk, with a side of another heady mole sauce - this time, brown, made with anchos and chocolate.
  • We are aswirl in a delirious dance of motion, emotion, an exhilarating carnival ride of heady smells and riotous color. Donna Henes: Spring Fever!
  • I can remember the heady days of last Friday, putting together the 5pm bulletin for student radio.
  • A heady scent of jasmine hung in the summer air.
  • The Philosopher's Room is a heady mix of high art and popular culture, decorated with samplers embroidered with witty, mock-homespun proverbs.
  • Tröeg's newest brew, Nugget Nectar Ale, will take hopheads to nirvana with a heady collection of Nugget, Warrior and Tomahawk hops.
  • Karan is famously enamored with Casablanca lilies and uses them in her scents as often as she possibly can, and Gold is built around the intoxicating aroma of these heady, nectarous flowers. Archive 2007-06-01
  • Now, decades since those heady days, two Irish businessmen are intent on waging their own space race.
  • But it all raises a question: how long can football enjoy its heady status at the centre of global discourse? Times, Sunday Times
  • James, by contrast, has risen to a heady eminence which serves to further emphasize the humiliation of his sibling.
  • These are heady days for City fans. Times, Sunday Times
  • I loved its profuse blossoms, its heady scent.
  • And this is immediately apparent when one returns, in the final chapter, to the heady early days in New York.
  • If they switch off and the closed-circuit figures drop, the present heady economics of it all begin to crumble.
  • Those looking for a more definitive primer on Ze and his relentlessly inventive experimentalism should turn to 2010's "Studies of Tom Ze: Explaining Things So I Can Confuse You," a five-disc, vinyl-only retrospective with a title that only hints at the heady reveries contained within. Lost tracks: Tom Ze, "Estudando a Bossa (Nordeste Plaza)"
  • Way back in March our local carnival float committee decided on its theme of 'Ashes Fever', anticipating a heady summer of cricket, with a Jack Russell dressed in whites on the float.
  • I will never understand whether it was complete inexperience or a heady excitement just to be going to college that allowed me to ignorantly trust my father to handle everything properly.
  • Gatha drank in the heady results as each day brought him closer to resuming a full work load. Bloodlines
  • Dance in the grass, drink the heady wine of freedom, lay the young buff men with kouros bodies, and some of the young women as well. 2nd March '06
  • With a freshness and abundance that looks forward to the heady days of summer, it should make a perfect garden plant. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is these peaches, apricots, cherries, plums, nectarines, citrus fruits and figs that once again fill the Orchard House with their heady scent.
  • Platonov, however, is hardly a conventionally realistic writer, since the nature of the post-Revolutionary world is that history has ended and reality has been upended, replaced by a heady brew of utopian anticipations and nightmarish premonitions. Deals
  • It was the heady days of the late 1980s, the days of sharp suits, slicked back hair and red braces over striped shirts.
  • Such heady days may yet return to Carrow Road, but will only do so with sensible and careful planning.
  • It was the heady days of the late 1980s, the days of sharp suits, slicked back hair and red braces over striped shirts.
  • Like a weak version of cocaine or amphetamine, alcohol boosts dopamine levels, producing a brief period of heady stimulation.
  • Groggily the world opened its eyes on Wednesday, still half-drunk from the heady, intoxicating punch that is the US presidential elections.
  • The heady aftertaste lingered just long enough for me to order another one to prolong the experience.
  • Fifty years later, he strode the scene with his heady compositions.
  • Accessible only by a dirt path which runs off a single track road, it's about as far from the heady glamour of Hollywood as you can imagine.
  • But the brittle strums of acoustic and Nick Kenyon's powerful voice add up to a heady concoction of protest song and a truly unplugged, but no less energetic workout.
  • The heady scent of roses and wet grass grabbed a hold of his senses and sent a shiver up his spine.
  • There was a kind of heady fetor in the air, and Alaine tried very hard not to breathe too much of it for fear of choking on it and giving her whereabouts away.
  • This is heady stuff for a world as phlegmatic as racing. Times, Sunday Times
  • It could be a piece on building your collection, buying your books from pavements, Wheeler stalls, traffic signals or ordering them on the net; fanatic non-lenders who don't lend their books no matter what; lenders who are always passing on their books; rage at book vandals who scribble in ballpoint pen in the margins and underline lines they are particularly moved by; diarists; fetishes like only buying hard back; memories associated with inscriptions on the first page; the heady smell of old paper pockmarked with pinholes; serendipitious discoveries; the quirks of your local lending library, lifelong quests to source and own a whole series, say Granta or the Time Life series; first-edition fanatics; inheriting grandpa's collections and so on. Archive 2006-06-01
  • I now prefer the intoxicating blend of Russian caravan and lapsang souchong to the heady mix of vodka and tonic, going to bed early to sleeping in late, cook books to comic books.
  • The orgasm and the heady feeling of wholeness rushed over his senses, dulling the panic and fear. Rogue Oracle
  • Spanish wine, which was higher in alcohol than other wines, was regarded mainly as cheaper heady plonk, and better, more expensive, wines were often cut with it.
  • Slide the turkey to one end of this gorgeous creamware platter, then fill the other with bright lemons and heady lavender.
  • The would-be actress started to become aware of the world in a sluggish, heady mist.
  • For the trip inspired him to resurrect the long forgotten ballet Daphnis and Chloe from the Diaghilev repertoire of those heady days.
  • The Guggenheim, which more than any other art museum epitomized the heady expansiveness of the 1990s economy, has suffered more than most.
  • It was an odd, heady experience. Times, Sunday Times
  • Using a heady combination of intellect and inspiration, the principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra is making it one of the world's great orchestras.
  • Those magnificent men in the Maroon, those glorious memories, and those vignettes from the past of stirring feats and heady conquests.
  • At its best, Argentina's adopted white grape makes fragrant, heady wines.
  • He forces paperwhite narcissus bulbs that fill the house with an intense, heady perfume. Archive 2009-01-01
  • What must it have been like in the heady days of Paul's missionary work there?
  • All I could remember was heady days hauling in saithe, sea bass and mackerel by the barrowload.
  • All cost just under £2, came in a specific glass and were potent, heady and delicious.
  • The heady local beer, Viking, is sold in a 500 ml glass, which looks just like a pint.
  • I awoke very suddenly to the heavy, heady smell of smoke, and it immediately felt as if my lungs were being stabbed.
  • The heady air was filled with exotic fragrances of spices laced with the pungent aroma of seething humanity. Times, Sunday Times
  • If they switch off and the closed-circuit figures drop, the present heady economics of it all begin to crumble.
  • The magnificent shades of lavender-purple and white blossoms with their heady show and sweet fragrance renewed my love affair with the lilac.

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