nauseating

IPA: nˈɔʒieɪtɪŋ

adjective

  • Causing a feeling of nausea; disgusting and revolting.
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Examples of "nauseating" in Sentences

  • The numbers are nauseating.
  • I'd agree with the nauseating part.
  • I can't read the nauseating propaganda.
  • The double standards here is nauseating.
  • It's sort of nauseating to read actually.
  • The subject is nauseating, puerile and insulting.
  • The geologists snapped photos as the plane banked in nauseating circles.
  • Lokk in the dictionary under the word nauseating and there will be a recent photo of giuliani.
  • What's nauseating is your inability to put together a sentence, have any sort of grammar, or spell. teacher
  • She was ridiculed for being too intellectual, sniped at for being smug, called nauseating for, as far as I could see, no other crime than answering lots of questions.
  • This is one of the most valuable of our indigenous plants, well known as a nauseating diaphoretic and expectorant, possessing some narcotic power, and acting particularly on the bronchial mucous membranes.
  • In their report, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, researchers describe two cases in which patients discontinued use of generic metformin because of what they described as the nauseating smell of the drug.
  • This is how the movie is described by the distributor, Criterion Collection: Pier Paolo Pasolini's notorious final film, Salo, or the 120 Days of Sodom, has been called nauseating, shocking, depraved, pornographic . . . it's also a masterpiece.
  • But for Slate's Dana Stevens, the film "never really brings together its two reasons for existing: to make us think, in nauseating detail, about the food we eat, and to tell the stories of some of the people who make it, market it, and sell it."

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synonyms for nauseating
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