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  1. Dictionary
    dizzy
    /ˈdɪzi/

    adjective

    verb

    • 1. make (someone) feel unsteady, confused, or amazed: "her nearness dizzied him"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. feeling as if everything is turning around, and that you are not able to balance and may fall over: Going without sleep for a long time makes me feel dizzy and light-headed. dizzy with I felt dizzy with excitement as I went up to collect the award. Fewer examples.

  3. 1. : foolish, silly. 2. a. : having a whirling sensation in the head with a tendency to fall. b. : mentally confused. 3. a. : causing giddiness or mental confusion. dizzy heights. b. : caused by or marked by giddiness. c. : extremely rapid. prices climbing at a dizzy rate. dizzily. ˈdi-zə-lē. adverb. dizziness.

  4. You can use dizzy to describe someone who is careless and forgets things, but is easy to like. She is famed for playing dizzy blondes. ...a charmingly dizzy great-grandmother.

  5. feeling as if everything is turning around, and that you are not able to balance and may fall over: Going without sleep for a long time makes me feel dizzy and light-headed. dizzy with I felt dizzy with excitement as I went up to collect the award. Fewer examples.

  6. Dizzy definition: having a sensation of whirling and a tendency to fall; giddy; vertiginous. . See examples of DIZZY used in a sentence.

  7. 1. affected with a whirling or reeling sensation; giddy. 2. (Psychology) mentally confused or bewildered. 3. (Psychology) causing or tending to cause vertigo or bewilderment. 4. informal foolish or flighty.

  8. having or causing a whirling sensation; liable to falling. “had a dizzy spell” “a dizzy pinnacle” synonyms: giddy, vertiginous, woozy. ill, sick. affected by an impairment of normal physical or mental function. adjective. lacking seriousness; given to frivolity.

  9. DIZZY definition: feeling like everything is turning round, so that you feel sick or as if you might fall. Learn more.

  10. Definitions of 'dizzy' 1. If you feel dizzy, you feel that you are losing your balance and are about to fall. [...] 2. You can use dizzy to describe someone who is careless and forgets things, but is easy to like. [...] 3. See dizzy heights [...] More. Conjugations of 'dizzy' present simple: I dizzy, you dizzy [...]

  11. dizzy. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Illness & disability diz‧zy /ˈdɪzi/ adjective 1 feeling unable to stand steadily, for example because you are looking down from a high place or because you are ill The heat and the champagne made him feel dizzy.