dizzier
英 [ˈdɪzɪə]
美 [ˈdɪzɪər]
adj. 头晕目眩的; 眩晕的; 使人眩晕的; 使人头昏眼花的; 使人感到变化太快的; 愚蠢的; 笨的
dizzy的比较级
柯林斯词典
- ADJ-GRADED 头晕目眩的;眩晕的
If you feeldizzy, you feel that you are losing your balance and are about to fall.- Her head still hurt, and she felt slightly dizzy and disoriented...
她的头还痛,并且觉得有些晕头转向。 - He began to get dizzy spells.
他开始一阵阵地头晕。
- Her head still hurt, and she felt slightly dizzy and disoriented...
- ADJ-GRADED (指女子)粗心的,没记性的,大大咧咧的
You can usedizzyto describe a woman who is careless and forgets things, but is easy to like.- She is famed for playing dizzy blondes.
她以扮演金发傻妞而闻名。 - ...a charmingly dizzy great-grandmother.
一位迷人的大大咧咧的曾祖母
- She is famed for playing dizzy blondes.
- VERB 使眩晕;使困惑;使晕头转向
If somethingdizziesyou, it causes you to feel unsteady or confused.- The sudden height dizzied her and she clung tightly.
突然上升的高度让她晕头转向,她抓得紧紧的。
- The sudden height dizzied her and she clung tightly.
- PHRASE 重要的职位;显赫的地位
If you say that someone has reachedthe dizzy heights ofsomething, you are emphasizing that they have reached a very high level by achieving it.- I escalated to the dizzy heights of director's secretary.
我升到了总经理秘书这一显赫高位。
- I escalated to the dizzy heights of director's secretary.