The concept of getting dizzy is based on liquid that is somewhere inside your head near both of you ears. When you spin around and around, that liquid keeps swiahing around too. When you stop, the liquid is still spinning, so you still feel like your spinning. That's how you get dizzy. So yes obviously now you can get dizzy in space.
"Dizzy-eyed" is not a common phrase, but it could be interpreted as describing someone with a confused or disoriented expression in their eyes due to feeling dizzy or lightheaded.
by making you feel dizzy !
A dizzy devotee.
Space travel can have various effects on the human body, such as muscle atrophy, bone density loss, cardiovascular changes, and vision impairment. Exposure to radiation and the psychological effects of isolation and confinement can also impact astronauts. However, ongoing research is focused on understanding these effects and developing countermeasures to mitigate them for long-duration space missions.
Dizzy- possibly nauseated and bruised from falling over.
His nickname is Dizzy because of the way he acted.
If I drink too much wine I feel dizzy. Spinning in circles will make you dizzy. I get so dizzy, I see stars!
They can make you dizzy/stick and long enough exposure in a confided space will cause you to pass out and die.
Yes, He's dizzy (He is dizzy) is a correct sentence. He is the subject, is is the verb (linking), and dizzy is a predicate adjective.
A "dizzy" is slang for distributor.
No dizzy is an adjective.
The flu left me feeling dizzy. Feeling dizzy, I sat down.
The word dizzy is mostly an adjective.However, when used as a transitive verb the past tense is dizzied.
Dizzy Mizz Lizzy ended in 1998.
You get dizzy by spinning around too much.
No Dizzy does not die in GOW3.
Dizzy Reed is 6'.