dizzied
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]dizzied (comparative more dizzied, superlative most dizzied)
- Dizzy; light-headed.
- 2006, Shawn M. Sutherland, Guilty Gone Wrong, page 45:
- When he reached the landing he was very dizzied and walked over to a corner where he made himself comfortable for the time being.
- 2010, Bethany Campbell, Don't Talk to Strangers, page 3:
- She was even more dizzied to realize there was true hunger in his voice and that the hunger was for her.
- 2018, Theoden Humphrey, The Adventures of Damnation Kane, Volume I, page 165:
- I could do no more than rise to hands and knees and then collapse, eyes shut against the spinning of my dizzied head, my back agaist the beast-wagon that had shielded me from certain death.
- Frenzied; frenetic.
- 1886, C. E. Alexander, Religious Poems:
- Then comes heart-ached, care, distress, Blighted hope, and loneliness, Wounds from friend, and gifts from foe, Dizzied faith, and guilt and woe,
- 1995, Spyros Plaskovitēs, The Façade Lady of Corfu, page 19:
- Those taps reached the Square and still further, when the few lanterns were lit and the bats began their dizzied chase and the silence could no longer fit in pockets and words had a hard time huddling on the lips of all the persons spared by the War, […]
- 2023, Wendy Nordick, Indelible: A Social Worker in the Wake of Civil War:
- With the short notice to leave Nuwara Eliya, Bill and I plunged into dizzied activity.
Derived terms
[edit]Verb
[edit]dizzied
- simple past and past participle of dizzy