giddy vs wild

giddy

adj
  • Feeling great anger; furious, raging. 

  • Joyfully elated; overcome with excitement or happiness. 

  • Causing or likely to cause dizziness or a feeling of unsteadiness. 

  • Unable to concentrate or think seriously; easily excited; impulsive; also, lightheartedly silly; frivolous. 

  • 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. 

verb
  • To make (someone or something) dizzy or unsteady; to dizzy. 

  • To become dizzy or unsteady. 

wild

adj
  • Furious; very angry. 

  • From or relating to wild creatures. 

  • Disheveled, tangled, or untidy. 

  • Hard to steer. 

  • Raucous, unruly, or licentious. 

  • Exposed to the wind and sea; unsheltered. 

  • Amazing, awesome, unbelievable. 

  • Untamed; not domesticated; specifically, in an unbroken line of undomesticated animals (as opposed to feral, referring to undomesticated animals whose ancestors were domesticated). 

  • Of an audio recording: intended to be synchronized with film or video but recorded separately. 

  • Enthusiastic. 

  • Of unregulated and varying frequency. 

  • Able to stand in for others, e.g. a card in games, or a text character in computer pattern matching. 

  • Unrestrained or uninhibited. 

  • Visibly and overtly anxious; frantic. 

  • Not capable of being represented as a finite closed polygonal chain. 

  • Very inaccurate; far off the mark. 

noun
  • The undomesticated state of a wild animal. 

  • A wilderness. 

  • civilization at large as opposed to contrived or laboratory conditions. 

adv
  • Intended to be synchronized with film or video but recorded separately. 

  • Inaccurately; not on target. 

verb
  • (In the form wilding or wildin') To act in a strange or unexpected way. 

  • To commit random acts of assault, robbery, and rape in an urban setting, especially as a gang. 

How often have the words giddy and wild occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )