晕头转向 | yūn tóu zhuàn xiàng | confused and disoriented | |
晕厥 | yūn jué | to faint | |
发晕 | fā yūn | to feel dizzy | |
头晕 | tóu yūn | dizzy | |
头晕目眩 | tóu yūn mù xuàn | to have a dizzy spell; dazzled |
红晕 | hóng yùn | to blush; to flush red | |
眩晕 | xuàn yùn | vertigo; dizziness; fainting; feeling of swaying, head spinning, lack of balance or floating (e.g. from a stroke); Taiwan pr. xuan4 yun1 | |
晕船 | yùn chuán | to become seasick | |
晕车 | yùn chē | to be carsick | |
眼晕 | yǎn yùn | to feel dizzy |
1 | I was sitting around the fire pit in my backyard with a handful of straight male friends when drunken conversation inevitably turned to sex. | |
2 | Paul: But he is the only guy saw my face then fainted. | |
3 | When he fainted, his son bore him out of the room. | |
4 | He fainted from hunger. | |
5 | Colleague: Yes, my neck is stiff, and I feel dizzy and sick after a busy day. |