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The phrase "so dizzy" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used as an adjective phrase to describe someone's state of feeling lightheaded or disoriented. Example: After riding the rollercoaster multiple times, I felt so dizzy that I had to sit down and catch my breath.
Exact(52)
I felt so dizzy from all the moving colours.
So, dizzy and feverish, she stumbled home for another four miles, empty-handed.
But walking to the kitchen made her so dizzy that her vision failed.
His vision was failing, and he sometimes felt so dizzy that he couldn't stand.
Shortly afterwards Schippers was so dizzy she had to see a doctor.
"Opal", says Doris is so dizzy she couldn't even pass French 1".
Similar(8)
I was unable to drink anything and have never felt so dehydrated, dizzy and desperate for water.
In the last year or so, those dizzy fantasies and their sensations had stopped, cut off as abruptly as if someone had pulled a switch, only the memory of them left like markers on the surface above deep water.
Some of the new drugs made him dizzy so now he also has a pill for the dizziness.
This makes me feel dizzy, so I resort to a huddled foetal position on the floor.
Busy patterns can make patients dizzy, so solid-colored carpeting and simple tile adorn the floor.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com