[
US
/ˈwuzi/
]
[ UK /wˈuːzi/ ]
[ UK /wˈuːzi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
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
How To Use woozy In A Sentence
- Only once they were by the front exit did the flight attendant feel woozy and realise she had a deep laceration in her leg.
- On Stargazing, singers gently coo over leisurely breakbeats, spacey samples and woozy strings.
- The air reeked of melting plastic and the woozy vapors of diesel fuel and high-test gasoline. BLACKWATER SOUND
- It is also the name of the woozy instrumental opening track. The Sun
- Gone was the woozy romanticism I had wanted to read into his first billet-doux.
- It made him slightly woozy, but over time he learnt to be a more attentive lover. Times, Sunday Times
- The hospital released her with the tests proving inconclusive, and warned her to be careful if she was feeling slightly woozy or dizzy.
- This makes you feel woozy and well disposed to others around you. The Sun
- This would make me woozy and two glasses would render me insensible.
- Afterwards, you're likely to have a headache and feel woozy for a few hours. The Sun