If the problem is temporary you could use 'disoriented'.
I am not a teacher.
Which word or phrase is used to describe a person who has no sense of direction?
If the problem is temporary you could use 'disoriented'.
I am not a teacher.
a drifter?
Hey Mr.19,
if you mean by "having no sense of direction" that that person has trouble navigating and does not always know where other places are relative to his location, then you could say "He is not good with directions" or "He's bad with directions".
*not a teacher*
Directionally challenged
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
I think it may have been slightly tongue-in-cheek. There is a trend in politically-correct circles to use '<adverb>-challenged' as a more acceptable way of saying that someone is defective in some way - emphasizing that they were born that way and doing admirably in the circumstances. A bald person, for example, might be called 'follically-challenged'. Sometimes, apologizing for my lack of a second X-chromosome, I call myself 'chromosomatically-challenged'; not everyone gets the joke... (X chromosome - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia )
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