dizzy adj. (-zier;-ziest) 1.頭暈眼花的。 2.(高度、速度等)使人眼花繚亂的。 3.〔美俚〕被弄糊涂的;昏頭昏腦的,愚蠢的。 a dizzy speed [height] 使人頭暈目眩的速度[高空]。 get [feel] dizzy 感到頭暈。 The wet heat made him dizzy. 蒸人的暑熱使他頭暈目眩。 He was dizzy with shame. 他羞愧得變糊涂了。 that dizzy blonde 那個愚蠢的金發(fā)女人。 vt. (-zied;-zying) 1. 使頭暈眼花,使發(fā)昏。 2. 使變糊涂。 prospects so brilliant as to dizzy the mind 如此美好的前途使頭腦變得發(fā)暈了。 dizzily adv. dizziness n.
Hearn pondered his responses, and lost himself quickly in the dizzying heights of chess . 候恩默默地思考著對策,很快就沉浸在奧妙無窮的棋局里。
The airplane climbed to a dizzy height 飛機爬到令人頭暈目眩的高度。
He looked down from a dizzy height 他從暈頭轉向高度往下看。
Notwithstanding the spectre of past oil shocks, crude prices have risen to ever-dizzier heights without derailing a five-year period of strong global growth 盡管過去石油震蕩的陰魂仍然在游蕩,原油價格仍然達到使人眼暈的高價,并且沒有阻止5年的世界經濟快速增長。
A brown spotted lady-bug climbed the dizzy height of a grass blade, and tom bent down close to it and said : " lady-bug, lady-bug, fly away home, your house is on fire, your children s alone, 一只背上有棕色斑點的花大姐趴在一片草葉的葉尖,湯姆俯下身子,對它說:“花大姐,花大姐,快回家,你的家里著火啦,你的娃娃找媽媽?!?i class="labawb" onClick="playMp3('sound_c_5')">