Unable to concentrate or think seriously; easily excited; impulsive; also, lightheartedly silly; frivolous.
Joyfully elated; overcome with excitement or happiness.
Causing or likely to cause dizziness or a feeling of unsteadiness.
Feeling great anger; furious, raging.
Of an animal, chiefly a sheep: affected by gid (“a disease caused by parasitic infestation of the brain by tapeworm larvae”), which may result in the animal turning around aimlessly.
Feeling a sense of spinning in the head, causing a perception of unsteadiness and being about to fall down; dizzy.
Moving around something or spinning rapidly.
To make (someone or something) dizzy or unsteady; to dizzy.
To become dizzy or unsteady.
Positively affecting the mind, confidence, or will.
Probable but not proved.
Of or relating to principles of right and wrong in behaviour, especially for teaching right behaviour.
Conforming to a standard of right behaviour; sanctioned by or operative on one's conscience or ethical judgment.
Capable of right and wrong action.
To moralize.
Moral practices or teachings: modes of conduct.
The ethical significance or practical lesson.