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The phrase "I got dizzy at" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a moment or situation that caused you to feel dizzy.
Example: "I got dizzy at the amusement park after riding the roller coaster."
Alternatives: "I felt dizzy at" or "I became dizzy at."
Exact(2)
"Yesterday I got dizzy at one point," he said.
I'm afraid of heights and I got dizzy at the top.
Similar(58)
I would think about these mysteries till I got dizzy.
"The first day, I got dizzy a couple of times".
"There was a balcony and I got dizzy," she said.
I got dizzy and I fell, people were stepping on me.
"I got dizzy," Ellerbe recalled yesterday in Manhattan, on her way to Sydney.
"They say there is no spin, but I get dizzy looking at it.
Whenever I walk into a mall I get dizzy looking at signs touting "sales of the century," "buy one get one free" and "everything on sale".
At the moment I can't really read, because I get dizzy after a little while".
I get dizzy.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com