Aside from all the sakes, you can also dizzy yourself with shochu, the fierce Japanese vodka drink, which is newly in vogue in Tokyo. |
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She stayed slouched down in her chair though, too dizzy to stand up at the moment. |
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They started groping viciously and kissing savagely with loud, desperate smacks resonating into the dizzy evening air. |
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I had a few dizzy spells and moments of acute nausea but gradually began to feel better. |
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I grasped his muscular arms and tried to stand upright, but as I began to straighten up, I felt dizzy again, and everything went black. |
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She staggered out onto the balcony, dizzy, and searching for breathable air. |
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It makes my head go dizzy, like when trying to imagine the universe and the concept of infinite space. |
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His head was dizzy, he was wounded on his forehead, left knee, right ankle and his arm was bruised bad. |
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As she lifted herself up from the computer console, walking towards her cabin in a dizzy, almost vertiginous way, she tripped on a sharp object. |
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His face was falling closer and closer to mine and I felt that strange, dizzy feeling again. |
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When I don't have enough sugar, I'll get a little dizzy, and I take a glass of orange juice. |
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We hear his dizzy, endless melodic chain of hemidemisemiquavers pouring from the chromatic button keyboard of three accordions. |
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Some of the women reported feeling faint or dizzy, having heart palpitations, or having feelings of nausea. |
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The room was alive with color, so many hues and shades changing and spinning so rapidly that it made Dianne dizzy. |
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I want to go on the big coasters, and the spinning ones, the ones that make you dizzy. |
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He had woken up feeling dizzy and faint, a distant rushing sound in his ears. |
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This is when you stomach empties too quickly after eating, causing a drop in blood sugar and making you feel dizzy and faint. |
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If you become dizzy or faint while sitting, take several deep breaths and bend forward with your head between your knees. |
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When a panic attack strikes, most likely your heart pounds and you may feel sweaty, weak, faint, or dizzy. |
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My hands were trembling, I almost reached for the phone to call Nick because I felt so faint and dizzy. |
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She often had to stop up to 40 times during a training session and had to pull out of major competitions because she felt dizzy or faint. |
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They have three or four of these episodes a year when they feel dizzy or faint, but they just pick themselves up and carry on. |
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If you feel faint, sweaty, dizzy or confused you may be suffering from an insulin reaction. |
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This uplifting book mixes his own climbing stories with a learned investigation into man's fixation with dizzy heights. |
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A flood of sweetness overwhelmed her senses, making Shirley dizzy with pleasure. |
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My foggy mind clouded my thoughts, the heavy music returning, making me feel dizzy as my head pounded. |
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She may be dizzy, forgetful, disorganised and temperamental but she has always been reasonably candid about herself and her game plan. |
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I was feeling really dizzy, and no, it wasn't from the loud music and the fumes of B.O. wafting off of the dancing morons. |
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By day, as a student living with his genteel hosts, he cultivates the persona of a bookish young man given to headaches and dizzy spells. |
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Timberlake nails that dizzy kind of puppy love that his target audience so desires. |
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We caught the shuttle back to Heathrow, and arrived back with our heads still dizzy with emotion, a mixture of elation and relief. |
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The captain of the flight reported feeling dizzy and groggy and, at one point, donned an oxygen mask. |
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His head was still dizzy and his senses clouded, but one thing was for sure in his mind. |
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Peering over the edge behind the shrine, the sheer drop to the valley floor below made me dizzy. |
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Does household cleaning give you headaches, nausea, dizzy spells or sign irritations? |
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His vision was nearly back to normal, the dizzy spells happened only infrequently. |
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The physician twirled the patient around so fast and long, at one point, that the patient became dizzy and lost her balance. |
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With a dizzy head and uncontrollable balance, she took a couple steps towards the kitchen, but she swayed back and forth. |
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I turned around to tell him something in reply, but I suddenly felt very dizzy. |
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He experienced considerable headaches, loss of short-term and new memory, loss of concentration and dizzy spells. |
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Her mom makes her really mad a lot, and when that happens she'll run into her room and dance until she's dizzy. |
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She was so dizzy with happiness, she didn't notice them walk out of the door, she didn't care they were walking through the town. |
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As Chrissy unpacked her bag, Ian knelt on the pillows and looked down at the dizzy drop to the rocks below. |
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South of that lies the corrie of the pap, Coire na Ciche, taking its name the great rock that gazes down into the dizzy depths below. |
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The role of Irene could easily have just been put across as simply a dizzy, dumb blonde. |
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The bizarre thing about this scene is Bond playing the dizzy blonde to Moneypenny's quick-thinking control freak. |
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Is she afraid of being typecast as a brunette version of these dizzy dames? |
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Does that mean they're dizzy blondes who only care about counting alcohol units and snogging cute guys? |
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Karen played the dizzy girl who needed help with her bags and needing to be showed to her room. |
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I am once again a dizzy blonde in Swindon, having returned from my Welsh tour. |
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So, what has the dizzy blonde been doing, besides the usual clumsy bumping into things, talking rubbish and general silliness? |
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Yeah, she was a dizzy, out-of-this-world blonde, but she was great to party with, and great for cheering me up. |
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But perhaps because I'm dark not blonde, such idiotic statements are thought of as one-offs rather than a sign of a naturally dizzy blonde brain. |
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And now its the weekend, although the dizzy blonde has no friends about and no money to spend. |
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Neither the Government nor the media help him reach the dizzy heights of success. |
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As he look down upon their rivals from the dizzy heights of pole position, complacency is the only real gremlin to fear. |
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He has brought the society to the dizzy heights of competing and winning at national drama festivals and even competing on the world stage. |
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He guided his newly-promoted Portsmouth team to the dizzy heights of the top four. |
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He never reached the dizzy heights of role model, and he seems unlikely to scale them now. |
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These days, I drink to excess, and then wake up at six in the morning, grumpy, tired, dizzy, hungover and unable to go back to sleep. |
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Alligators eat you, bees sting, crabs pinch, riding a dromedary makes you dizzy. |
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Feeling too dizzy to undress properly, I kicked my shoes off and climbed under the duvet as I was. |
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In July of 1999, he began suffering dizzy spells, resulting in loss of balance and painful headaches. |
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The mast has been shown to adhere to safe radiation levels but Ryan is adamant that it gives him headaches and dizzy spells. |
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The principal commodities were depth defensemen, who rotated among teams in a dizzy kaleidoscope, and some intriguing goalie switches. |
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Smart men supposedly ignored dizzy dames and all the rest, listening not to the whippoorwill but to cash registers. |
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He took Becki's hands in his and they whirled round and round, until Becki felt rather dizzy. |
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I was also a little too aware of the scent of his aftershave or cologne, and the way it was making me faintly dizzy. |
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Of course, quit exercising if you're dizzy or nauseated, start sweating heavily, or feel so weak and wobbly that you can't maintain your form. |
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Stefani might give the impression of being a dizzy airhead, but she's no fool. |
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She stood up, feeling a bit dizzy, and closed her eyes until she recuperated the balance. |
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The hospital released her with the tests proving inconclusive, and warned her to be careful if she was feeling slightly woozy or dizzy. |
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He felt woozy and dizzy as usual in the morning, and he slowly rocked himself forward, and forced himself up. |
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For one rather panicky hour before dinner I thought I'd lost it altogether, feeling woozy and slightly dizzy. |
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Climbing up the lattice made Cerri dizzy, so as she climbed, she focused her thoughts on what she'd say to Alia to convince her to stay. |
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I take another drink but it makes me slightly dizzy, forcing me to retire to my bedroom. |
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She was a little dizzy from being righted to a standing position and Wrenn steadied her. |
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The blood was rushing to her head, and on top of all her other problems, now she was feeling dizzy and light-headed. |
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He made her a cup of tea, which she claimed made her light-headed and dizzy. |
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You may also feel light-headed or dizzy, especially when moving from a lying or sitting position to standing up. |
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It made me slightly dizzy and light-headed, and I collapsed backwards on the bed with every intent to sleep it off. |
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I took in her fragrance and felt light-headed and dizzy, almost unable to keep standing. |
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A simple accompaniment serves as a baseline from which a limpid melody explodes into a dizzy display of vocal pyrotechnics. |
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This is a Northern European mongrel of dizzy lo-fi with pop hooks to help you escape the everyday. |
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We enjoyed an excellent meal in a booth in an ersatz log cabin, then retired, dizzy and incredulous that we'd made it this far. |
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His head aches, he feels dizzy and nauseous, and his nose won't stop running. |
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It contains a nugget of truth and humanity that seems to be lacking in her world of dizzy friends and lubricous acquaintances. |
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Rumour has it, however, that one of the attendees is a long way from the world of dizzy studentdom, and is in fact a newspaper reporter. |
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Even a dizzy blonde like Marilyn suggests something more spiritual with the sadness lurking behind her baby blues. |
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When an ex-partner tried to buy some flippery for me, he became dizzy and nauseous when confronted by a sea of confusing tangas and teddies. |
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It was quickly followed by another backhand to the temple that left Cassandra dizzy and seeing double. |
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She paused a moment to gather breath as she felt dizzy from using her powers. |
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She started me, I jumped up, I got one of my dizzy spells, and she gave me a bust lip and probably a black eye. |
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The exhibition catalogue makes dizzy reading as one flicks through the highly animated drawings of buildings, aerial views of cityscapes. |
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The whispers in the walls were sending me slowly crazy, and the constant whirring of my empty mind made me feel dizzy. |
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The prickling in my feet comes and goes, and I'm tippy and dizzy every so often, but nothing is too bad right now. |
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A shaky laugh bubbles past his lips, and dizzy words start tumbling out of him. |
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Children who get dizzy and nauseated in the car are also prone to becoming seasick, trainsick, airsick, and sick on amusement park rides. |
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The close-quarter action photography with gristle and bone is spliced with dizzy shots of flying masonry launched by ginormous trebuchets. |
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It's taken me to the dizzy heights of success one day only to drag me down to the depths of despair the next. |
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Again, the owner will probably get dizzy doing all these pivots and turns, but it's important to keep at it. |
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The dancing couples twisted and turned, dancing until they got dizzy and sat down for a drink. |
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As she got older, she developed motion sickness, dizzy spells, and stomach ulcers. |
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But evidence suggests that in the world of business she is anything but a dizzy Sloane. |
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She would close her eyes and spin until she was too dizzy to stand. |
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There were no technicians with the latest equipment waiting to help him decipher the coughs, bellyaches, chest pains, dizzy spells and fevers that ailed his patients. |
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Gamins, snappy in pinstripe suits and cross-culture printed silk, dress up for the evening like gypsies in a dizzy fandango of swirling, hand-painted silk ruffled skirts. |
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She pulled herself up using the wall as a support, still feeling dizzy. |
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I felt dizzy from standing so quickly when I had gotten out of bed. |
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If you are walking outdoors on a 37 degrees centigrade day and suddenly feel weak, dizzy and nauseous chances are you are suffering from heat exhaustion. |
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Jamie hopes to reach dizzy heights just like big sister Amanda. |
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The CBS network has now been switched off for millions of viewers, and the propaganda war would make George Orwell dizzy. |
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One of the throw pillows had a honeycomb pattern that made me dizzy. |
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After a good twenty minutes in one of these megastores, however, experience tells that the dizzy anticipation is usually replaced by just plain dizziness. |
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She was dizzy. The world swam before her eyes and rocked like the boat. |
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She was surprised how the scent made her light-headed and slightly dizzy. |
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He felt himself go dizzy, and had to put his head against a pillow slowly, closing his eyes and gulping nervously, not daring to move, in case he woke her up. |
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I was beginning to feel slightly dizzy, most likely from loss of blood. |
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After drinking too much wine, and finding it a little difficult to type, the dizzy blonde returns to ponder the biggest, most unanswerable question of all, in every situation. |
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It was flowing out instantly, but she was filled with such force that she was dizzy and light-headed, yet at the same time stronger than she had ever been in her life. |
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The ache was beginning to impair my vision, making me dizzy and nauseous. |
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Whatever the cause, I felt dizzy, and without any bearings or footholds. |
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The dizzy spell passed, and he tentatively opened his eyes again. |
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They first met and became friends six years ago when she was playing Corrie's dizzy blonde barmaid Raquel and he was a top executive at Granada studios. |
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He was nauseated, short of breath, dizzy and drenched in perspiration. |
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After a year in the mountains he was a stick figure of his former self, prone to fevers and random dizzy spells that made his head feel like a vigorously shaken snow globe. |
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I tried not to think about it so much because it made my head all dizzy. |
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When the camera shifts to what the actors can see, the audience gets dizzy views of the surroundings, thus augmenting the overwhelming panic that fuels this film. |
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Even when he rose to the dizzy heights of popularity, he remained poor. |
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Bren didn't hear, dizzy and faint from the nausea and endless retching. |
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He left the room and I lay back as the dizzy feeling returned. |
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There's a little kid just in front of me not older than 9-years-old absolutely having the time of his life watching the gig from the dizzy heights of his dad's shoulders. |
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The train journey was filled with little aggravating child noises and I was sitting in the wrong direction so arrive in LA feeling queasy and dizzy. |
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Annie's head ached, her ribs hurt from coughing, and the simple act of craning her neck to peer through a clear spot on the windshield made her dizzy. |
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And maybe her concussion was pretty bad, and she was dizzy and miserable and in bed a lot, and eventually the clot returned. |
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He had begun getting dizzy spells and even lost consciousness at points. |
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At the end of their segment, the BBC commentator Hazel Irvine noted how dizzy they must be. |
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He was dizzy and a sharp pain stabbed into the back of his head. |
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His leg was throbbing terribly now and he felt just a little dizzy. |
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But a setback came when he had headaches, nagging pains and dizzy spells. |
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She hadn't even got out of bed when we arrived and so we left her to get herself mended and wandered off, in a dizzy haze towards the Putney Embankment. |
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The infamous purple drank made me dizzy and sick, but I loved its aftertaste. |
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She felt dizzy and befuddled, almost like the time she had swiped a drink of her mother's homebrewed mead. |
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When he stood up, he got so dizzy that he had to sit down again. |
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I felt dizzy and fainting at places, but I still made it to the finish line. |
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I'm feeling a bit weak and dizzy. I think I'm having a dizzy spell. |
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Are you having headaches, feeling dizzy, fatigued, nauseous, photophobic, foggy? |
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Wicked turns the well-loved childhood story of the Wizard of Oz on its head and birls it round until it's dizzy. |
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After an hour at school she was soaked with sweat, dizzy, and headachy. |
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I dream, I feel dizzy, I'm flying, The tyre goes higher and higher, In a spin, like a spinning top, I don't want it to stop, I move so fast, up, down and around. |
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In his off-hours, he jammed with Dizzy Gillespie and other founding fathers of bebop. |
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Pettiford was the bassist in Dizzy Gillespie's original bebop combo in 1943 and 1944, but by 1945 Gillespie needed a replacement. |
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Louis Armstrong was vocal about his dislike of the bebop innovations of Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. |
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He has guested on records by Sting, George Michael and Carmel and played with jazz greats like Dizzy Gillespie, Gil Evans, Clark Terry and Quincy Jones. |
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Armstrong's scat singing also influenced the singing technique of bebop innovator Dizzy Gillespie, who first began recording bebop in 1944 with saxophonist Charlie Parker. |
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She was also friends with bebop wonders Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell, and Theolonious Monk, who often sought her advice on how to write or play their own music. |
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Janet, the Okie woman, breaks a Dizzy Gillespie record over Dean's head. |
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Montreal regularly hosted performers such as Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin, Duke Ellington and Dizzy Gillespie in hot spots like Chez Paree and Rockhead's Paradise. |
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The cause was hemangiopericytoma, a rare vascular cancer, said his wife, Dizzy Cox. |
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The band for this excursion includes Richard Fortus, Marco Mendoza, Dizzy Reed, David Lowy and Brian Tichy. |
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They called him Dizzy for clowning and frowning on stage and gusting up a musical hurricane with bebop lightning bolts thrown into the mix. |
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Music by Dvorak in Slavonic Dance No 8 led us to an upbeat version of the Russian National Anthem entitled Glasnost by Dizzy Stratford. |
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Diagnosed with bilateral vestibulopathy with oscillopsia, this is the same illness that Angie Styles, the lead character in Dizzy, develops. |
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They'll be belting out some Christmassy tunes as well as hits like The Size of a Cow, Dizzy and Welcome to the Cheap Seats. |
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The early list of names included Slappy, Happy, Hoppy, Sleepy, Weepy, Dirty, Cranky, Sneezy, Hungry, Lazy, Grumpy, Dumpy, Bashful, Gabby, Blabby, Gloomy, Buzzy, Dizzy. |
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