daze (original) (raw)

After hearing their performance of this magnificent quartet one is left dazzled, dazed, and filled with wild surmise.

Other children with disorganized attachment classifications exhibit cognitive disorientation or affective dysregulation, such as appearing dazed or depressed while with the caregiver or showing apprehension of the caregiver on reunion.

He was dazed with happiness.

The scene cuts back to the hospital room, where the soldier is now awake, though clearly dazed or otherwise in a state of altered consciousness of some kind.

He is dazed and dazzled; he does not understand and is confused when confronted with it in school.

It is not too much to say that those most concerned, the prospective victims, were dazed and disbelieving.

We are still dazed under the blow which has befallen us.

He had apparently been dazed and stunned, and could give no coherent account of himself.

As you will understand, this has left the town dazed and in complete shock.

He seemed dazed himself when he began it, and he had us all dazed when he sat down.

It appears to he still dazed by the inevitable confusion that followed the launching of these great reforms without the slightest preparation or planning.

Others, dazed and aimless, simply sit on the ground waiting for death.

They never expected to be there, and they are still dazed by it.

Above all, it is a town which is dazed by the present unemployment levels.

She can wander around in a perpetual daze and continually break into tears.

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