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queasiness

/kwee-zee/US // ˈkwi zi //UK // (ˈkwiːzɪ) //

恶心,痉挛,恶心感,错觉

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1

    quea·si·er, quea·si·est.

    • : inclined to or feeling nausea, as the stomach, a person, etc.; nauseous; nauseated.
    • : tending to cause nausea; nauseating.
    • : uneasy or uncomfortable, as feelings, the conscience, etc.
    • : squeamish; excessively fastidious.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as inupset

Examples

  • If sharing that potentially personal information makes you feel queasy, you’re not alone.

  • It might leave you a little queasy, but there’s no denying it’s deliciously sour.

  • Thus the simple images become as unsettling as their queasy colors.

  • The new craft is designed with first-person flying in mind and it has gotten some technical upgrades to make the process seamless and less likely to make you queasy.

  • That makes me a bit queasy, especially when I consider the fates of so many other young artists who’ve connected with their even younger audiences on the level of brain chemistry.

  • Surely all this graphic talk of gastrointestinal distress is making you queasy.

  • Yet financialism can leave voters feeling queasy, and candidates grasping for answers.

  • In any event, the advice is queasy and muddy: what exactly are reformed Republicans supposed to say about marriage equality?

  • Here, we examine its origins—a queasy history of violence and sexuality.

  • An ad for the attempted “male” oven, the Queasy Bake Cookerator.

  • He felt a queasy giddiness because there was no hand-railing at the outer lock door and he knew the depth of the fall outside.

  • Not that I would recommend it medicinally,—especially to persons of queasy stomachs, delicate nerves, and afflicted with bile.

  • The lurching billows of clouds made him queasy; he opened his Piper samples case and popped a pill into his mouth.

  • But midway the eighteenth century they were not so queasy–stomached.

  • He felt slightly queasy and wondered if he might be drowning.