1. 頭暈目眩的;眩暈的 If you feel dizzy, you feel that you are losing your balance and are about to fall.
e.g. Her head still hurt, and she felt slightly dizzy and disoriented... 她的頭還痛,并且覺(jué)得有些暈頭轉向。 e.g. He began to get dizzy spells. 他開(kāi)始一陣陣地頭暈。
dizzily Her head spins dizzily as soon as she sits up. 她一坐起來(lái)頭就暈。dizziness His complaint causes dizziness and nausea. 他的病引起了頭暈和惡心。
2. (指女子)粗心的,沒(méi)記性的,大大咧咧的 You can use dizzy to describe a woman who is careless and forgets things, but is easy to like.
e.g. She is famed for playing dizzy blondes. 她以扮演金發(fā)傻妞而聞名。 e.g. ...a charmingly dizzy great-grandmother. 一位迷人的大大咧咧的曾祖母
3. 使眩暈;使困惑;使暈頭轉向 If something dizzies you, it causes you to feel unsteady or confused.
e.g. The sudden height dizzied her and she clung tightly. 突然上升的高度讓她暈頭轉向,她抓得緊緊的。
dizzying We're descending now at dizzying speed. 我們正以令人眩暈的速度下降。
4. 重要的職位;顯赫的地位 If you say that someone has reached the dizzy heights of something, you are emphasizing that they have reached a very high level by achieving it.
e.g. I escalated to the dizzy heights of director's secretary. 我升到了總經(jīng)理秘書(shū)這一顯赫高位。
dizzy英英釋義
verb
1. make dizzy or giddy
e.g. a dizzying pace
dizzy的反義詞
adj
1. lacking seriousness given to frivolity
e.g. a dizzy blonde light-headed teenagers silly giggles
2. having or causing a whirling sensation liable to falling
e.g. had a dizzy spell a dizzy pinnacle had a headache and felt giddy a giddy precipice feeling woozy from the blow on his head a vertiginous climb up the face of the cliff