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[ US /ˈnɔziˌeɪt/ ]
[ UK /nˈɔːsɪˌe‍ɪt/ ]
VERB
  1. upset and make nauseated
    The smell of the food turned the pregnant woman's stomach
    The mold on the food sickened the diners
  2. cause aversion in; offend the moral sense of
    The pornographic pictures sickened us

How To Use nauseate In A Sentence

  • Take of paregoric, liquorice and gum arabic, each an ounce, from fifty to one hundred drops of antimonial wine and two gills of hot water; mix them well together, and when cold, bottle, and cork it tight; take two tea-spoonsful at a time; if it should nauseate, give a smaller quantity. Domestic Cookery, Useful Receipts, and Hints to Young Housekeepers
  • As the blazing sun beats down on them, weary Confederates are ‘nauseated and dizzy from sunstroke and heat exhaustion’, unable to bear the sweltering heat and humidity of Pennsylvania.
  • I was never so nauseated in my life with overplus of fallacy. Chapter 5: The Philomaths
  • Of course, quit exercising if you're dizzy or nauseated, start sweating heavily, or feel so weak and wobbly that you can't maintain your form.
  • Oral aspirin is difficult if the patient is nauseated and vomiting and the opiate given to relieve pain may delay gastric motility.
  • Should we be nauseated by people of the older generation expressing their affection?
  • The sick smell emanating from his cigar nauseated Hannah.
  • The idea of eating raw shellfish nauseates me.
  • She nauseated me with her cheerful singing with the woodland creatures and happy-go-lucky attitude.
  • The idea of eating raw shellfish nauseates me.
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