[
US
/ˈnɔʒiˌeɪtɪŋ/
]
[ UK /nˈɔːsɪˌeɪtɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /nˈɔːsɪˌeɪtɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
causing or able to cause nausea
nauseous offal
a nauseating smell
a sickening stench
How To Use nauseating In A Sentence
- Being rushed to hospital by ambulance can be a nauseating business.
- And yet our leaders who talk of freedom and human rights seem to be so silent on this nauseating conduct.
- Rarely has there been a more nauseating sight in a Scottish newspaper.
- He hates the decorations, the trees, the gifts and especially the nauseating yuletide happiness.
- Her strongest criticism was reserved for the prime minister whom she accused of 'nauseating hypocrisy'.
- The previous night's memorable madness in Apartment 15B rushes back to the young man along with the nauseating odor of upchuck, but he plays it cool, acting the wide-eyed innocent who doesn't have a clue.
- This is a display of nauseating deference; a offensive patronization of the man matched only by his undeserved canonisation.
- Nauseatingly fawning journalism that's all it is.
- Every nauseating action, every violation, abuse and mutilation is meticulously rendered.
- I think last year I wrote some nauseating guff about how lovely and peachy it all is, and how single people should be jolly happy and all the rest, because I was all loved up with Marianne.