nauseous

IPA: nˈɔʃʌs

adjective

  • Causing nausea; sickening or disgusting.
  • (obsolete) Inclined to nausea; sickly, squeamish.
  • (proscribed) Afflicted with nausea; sick.
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Examples of "nauseous" in Sentences

  • I was sick and nauseous for days.
  • I felt nauseous and had to get out soon.
  • I feel nauseous after reading the article.
  • All the unnecessary diving made me nauseous.
  • It was like just this emotion and it made you nauseous.
  • In fact, it is completely ignorant and it makes me nauseous.
  • Also, still nauseous, but now I have the headache of hunger.
  • He felt nauseous and weak, and suffered from a fit of vomiting.
  • A jockey initially doubled for her but became nauseous on the wires.
  • The patient experienced no relief and had a nauseous reaction to the drugs.
  • Also, I was gulping it down like medicine, in nauseous haste to get the ordeal over.
  • Keeping my fingers crossed that all goes well feeling nauseous is usually a good signBonne Continuation!!
  • I dig inside my jeans pocket and hand him four glittery Barbie candles in nauseous shades of pink and purple, then turn back to Tadpole, my head spinning.
  • Besides feeling tired and nauseous from the altitude I had to stop every five meters to catch my breath and ask myself what the hell was I doing this for; and my legs felt like lead, in concrete boots.
  • The handheld cinematography accentuates the horrendous circumstances a bit too strongly (I found myself getting nauseous from the shaky camerawork), and the 154-minute running time does not exactly fly by.
  • York consignees, says, that if the tea arrives subject to duty, "there will be no such thing as selling it, as the people would rather buy so much poison, as they say it is calculated to enslave them and their posterity, and are therefore determined not to take what they call the nauseous draught."
  • But if it should be subject to a duty here, I am much in doubt whether it will be safe, as almost every body in that case speaks against the admission of it, so that, altho 'I am well assured that the Governor will not suffer the laws to be trampled on, yet there will be no such thing as selling it, as the people would rather buy so much poison, than the tea with the duty thereon, calculated (they say) to enslave them and their posterity, and therefore are determined not to take what they call the nauseous draft.

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