giddy
suomi-englanti sanakirjagiddy englannista suomeksi
typerä
huimaava
Substantiivi
Verbi
giddy englanniksi
Feeling a sense of spinning in the head, causing a perception of unsteadiness and being about to down; dizzy.
(synonyms)
(ux)
(RQ:Boyle Occasional Reflections)
(RQ:Carroll Alice)
(RQ:Joyce Ulysses)
(quote-book)
Causing or likely to cause dizziness or a feeling of unsteadiness.
(RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3 Q1)
(RQ:Shakespeare Henry 4-2 Q1)
(RQ:Dryden Aureng-zebe)
(RQ:Cowper Poems)
(RQ:Hazlitt Table-Talk)
(RQ:Emerson Poems)
(RQ:Shakespeare Lucrece)
(RQ:Homer Pope Iliad)
(RQ:Goldsmith Traveller)
(RQ:Scott Lady of the Lake)
(RQ:Tennyson Poems 1842)
Unable to concentrate or think seriously; easily excited; impulsive; also, lightheartedly silly; frivolous.
(RQ:Shakespeare Henry 6-1)
(RQ:Donne Poems) / Here gathering Chroniclers, and by them ſtand / Giddie fantaſtique Poëts of each land.
(RQ:Shakespeare Much Ado About Nothing Q)
(RQ:Bacon Sylva Sylvarum)
(RQ:Milton Divorce) Many they ſhall reclaime from obſcure and giddy ſects, many regain from diſſolute and brutiſh licence, many from deſperate hardnes, if ever that vvere juſtly pleaded.
(RQ:Dryden Absalom)
(RQ:Goldsmith Vicar of Wakefield)
(RQ:Cowper Task)
(RQ:Disraeli Sybil)
(RQ:Maugham Of Human Bondage) Luard began to perform some trick with an ebony pen-holder of Philip's. "Don't play the giddy ox," said Philip. "You'll only break it."
(non-gloss).
(RQ:Kipling Seven Seas)
(RQ:Kipling Stalky)
(RQ:Buchan Thirty-Nine Steps)
Joyfully elated; overcome with excitement or happiness.
(syn)
(RQ:Shakespeare Merchant of Venice Q1) of praiſe be his or no.
(quote-book)|edition=3rd|location=London|publisher=(...) J. Buckland,(nb...)|year=1767|volume=II|page=4|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=m2GETbtVG7AC&pg=PA4|oclc=1051636961|passage=But I vvonder, that either theſe good men, or my mamma ſhou'd think, becauſe they may find it pleaſant vvho are come to maturity of judgment, that ſuch as vve vvho are in the gayeſt and giddyeſt part of life ſhou'd.
(RQ:Dickens Christmas Carol)
(RQ:Orczy Miss Elliott) Miss Phyllis Morgan, as the hapless heroine dressed in the shabbiest of clothes, appears in the midst of a gay and giddy throng; she apostrophizes all and sundry there, including the villain, and has a magnificent scene which always brings down the house, and nightly adds to her histrionic laurels.
Of an animal, chiefly a sheep: affected by (l), which may result in the animal around|turning around aimlessly.
(RQ:Dryden Fables)
(RQ:Homer Pope et al Odyssey)
(quote-journal) Archibald Hamilton Jun.(nb...); and sold by Robinson (bookseller)|George Robinson,(nb...)|month=September|year=1778|volume=X|page=487|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=5Co3AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA487|column=2|oclc=1029652258|passage=But the giddy, the idle, and the frivolous part of the vvorld vvill inceſſantly purſue a phantom, and graſp a ſhadovv.
(RQ:Bulwer-Lytton Alice)
(synonym of).
(RQ:Montaigne Florio Essayes)
(RQ:T. Herbert Travaile)
(RQ:Cleland Coxcomb) that had ſhe not really been one of the prettieſt figures that can be imagined, ſhe vvould have been inſufferable.
(RQ:Ouida Strathmore)
To become dizzy or unsteady.
(quote-book)(nb...)|year=1981|page=98|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/julyspeople0000gord_f5m6/page/98/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-224-01932-3|passage=Giddied, he gave up a moment's purchase of ground.
To move around something or spin rapidly; to reel; to whirl.
(RQ:Homer Chapman Odysseys)