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The phrase "I feel lightheaded" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when describing a sensation of dizziness or faintness, often due to various physical or emotional factors.
Example: "After standing up too quickly, I felt lightheaded and had to sit down for a moment."
Alternatives: "I feel dizzy" or "I'm feeling faint."
Exact(4)
Suddenly, I feel lightheaded.
On the fourth floor hallway there is a definite energy shift and I feel lightheaded every time we go up there.
"I feel lightheaded and need to lay down quietly somewhere," Bonnie Gafney, a park ranger who has yet to be fitted for a respirator, wrote in an illness report last week after two and half hours of working at the park's west entrance.
At worst, I feel lightheaded and faint.
Similar(52)
I felt lightheaded.
After 30 minutes of hovering, I told my friend that I felt lightheaded.
I felt lightheaded, my head ached and my stomach was painful, too.
Eddie Ramirez doesn't smoke, but nicotine still makes him feel "lightheaded sometimes," like he's "going to vomit".
Reading the headlines, I felt lightheaded, at a loss for words.
We feel lightheaded from the altitude and jittery from the ill-advised energy drink.
In the game, children choke each other, cutting off their oxygen supply, until they feel lightheaded.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com