woozy

IPA: wˈuzi

adjective

  • Queasy, dizzy, or disoriented.
  • Intoxicated by drink or drugs.
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Examples of "woozy" in Sentences

  • In the first quarter, Leftwich was knocked woozy from a hard hit by defensive end Robaire Smith.
  • However, a team spokesman said the fifth-year senior was kept out because he was woozy from the hit.
  • Forgive me, I’m still feeling a bit woozy from the mild earthquake in Baja California this afternoon.
  • AUBREY: When Umberger gazed up from the ice, it was with the kind of woozy look that showed he wasn't just down; he was in trouble.
  • We were woozy from the afternoon's trauma, and unstimulated by alcohol (I wasn't yet twenty-one, and management would not serve me a beer).
  • The two turned resolutely toward Olympic stadium and Mephistopheles, the torch held high, rode in woozy disbelief as they carried him to his destiny.
  • I think I am both physically and emotionally worn out from this (I managed to not break down in tears until after the test was over, but when I was still so woozy from the valium I couldn't get up.)
  • But the outcome was almost an afterthought for the Sabres, intent on getting back at the Senators after Ottawa's Chris Neil blindsided Chris Drury, knocking Buffalo's co-captain woozy and causing a deep gash across his head five minutes into the second period.

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synonyms for woozy
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