In Vertigo he really gets beneath the skin of a deranged romantic obsessive who develops acute melancholia. [noun]
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Acute vertigo with nausea and no obvious sign of recent or current ear problems is usually viral in origin. [noun]
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The very reasons for his action escaped him; only their vertigo was left with him. [noun]
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But he had not long been able to resist that mysterious and sovereign vertigo which may be designated as the call of the abyss. [noun]
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Vertigo seemed to have constructed it with blows of its wings. [noun]
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He dropped into a chair, with his head and both elbows on his bed, absorbed in thoughts which he could not grasp, and as though a prey to vertigo. [noun]
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Abstruse speculations contain vertigo; no, there is nothing to indicate that he risked his mind in apocalypses. [noun]
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Vertigo is a frequent result of cerebellar injury: animals indicate it by their actions; patients describe it. [Please select]
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Epilepsy must not be confounded with vertigo--the fainting which is an effect of heart troubles. [Please select]
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Between the coffee and this dimanche I have the vertigo. [Please select]
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