If you mean during turns, they spot. Spotting means you look to one side while turning then you flip you're head to continue looking to the side you are spotting. I suggest looking up spotting on Google or something...
If they are experienced then no. Dancers are taught how to spot when they turn so they don't get dizzy.
The why do tops get sick a lot joke is meant to play on the fact that tops spin and get dizzy.
Liz Sheridan says they were engaged, and had a short lived romance, and that for both of them, it was their "first" romantic love. They lived together. She also wrote a book titled "Dizzy & Jimmy:My Life with James Dean:A Love Story".
In alphabetical order: Angel Cake Cherry Crush Daizy Star and the Pink Guitar Dizzy Dreams and Doodles Daybook Driftwood Ginger Snaps Indigo Blue Letters to Cathy Love Peace & Chocolate Lucky Star Scarlett Shine on Daizy Star Sundae Girl Please see the related link below.
There are two main forms continuous and stanza. Continuous involves no breaks in the lines and can be further defined by the scansion, meter, and rhyme scheme. Stanza involves numerous stanzas of varying length that can also be further defined by scansion, meter, and rhyme scheme though there are many set types of stanza poetry such as limericks and sonnets and variations thereof that are already well defined based on tradition.
If they are experienced then no. Dancers are taught how to spot when they turn so they don't get dizzy.
The cast of Vertigo Lance and the Mind - 2012 includes: Ehab Elmezian as Vertigo, Dizzy and Solo Bianca Giselle Doria as Dancer
His nickname is Dizzy because of the way he acted.
If I drink too much wine I feel dizzy. Spinning in circles will make you dizzy. I get so dizzy, I see stars!
Yes, He's dizzy (He is dizzy) is a correct sentence. He is the subject, is is the verb (linking), and dizzy is a predicate adjective.
No dizzy is an adjective.
A "dizzy" is slang for distributor.
The flu left me feeling dizzy. Feeling dizzy, I sat down.
The word dizzy is mostly an adjective.However, when used as a transitive verb the past tense is dizzied.
Dizzy Mizz Lizzy ended in 1998.
Dizzy is the one to go with. People can be ditzy, but when it comes to using it with a blonde, you go with dizzy. In this usage dizzy means lacking seriousness; given to frivolity. "A dizzy blonde."
You get dizzy by spinning around too much.