Word
Of
The
Day
vertiginous
vertiginous \ver-TIJ-uh-nus\
adjective
Vertiginous is a formal adjective used to describe something that causes or is likely to cause a feeling of dizziness especially because of great height.
// As a window washer for some of the city’s tallest skyscrapers, Victor had to quickly master working at
vertiginous heights.
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Examples:
“The climb is infamous for its heart-pumping switchbacks and
vertiginous jaunt along a narrow sliver of crag. Those who fear heights, like me, typically avoid it.” — Stephanie Vermillion,
Travel + Leisure, 9 Nov. 2025
Did you know?
The climactic scene of
Alfred Hitchcock’s classic thriller
Vertigo features, appropriately, a dramatic climb—and fall—from a vertiginous bell tower.
Vertiginous, which describes things that cause
vertigo (a sensation of motion in which an individual or their surroundings seem to whirl dizzily) comes from the Latin adjective
vertiginosus, which in turn comes from the Latin noun
vertigo, meaning “a turning or whirling action.” Both words descend from the Latin verb
vertere, meaning “to turn.”
Vertiginous and
vertigo are just two of an almost dizzying array of
vertere offspring, from
adverse to
vortex. The “dizzying” sense of
vertiginous is often used figuratively, as in “the vertiginous heights of cinematic legend.”