nauseate

英 ['nɔːsɪeɪt; -z-] 美 ['nɔzɪet]
  • vi. 作呕;厌恶;产生恶感
  • vt. 使厌恶;使恶心;使作呕
GRE
nauseate
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1、from Ionic Greek nausia (Attic nautia) "seasickness, nausea, disgust".
2、naus- + -ea(由-ia后缀变体、变形而来).
3、literally "ship-sickness".
4、nausea => nause- + -ate => nauseate.
5. 谐音“拉屎、拉稀”。
nauseate 使恶心

来自nausea,恶心。

nauseate (v.)
1630s, "to feel sick, to become affected with nausea," from nauseat- past participle stem of Latin nauseare "to feel seasick, to vomit," also "to cause disgust," from nausea (see nausea). Related: Nauseated; nauseating; nauseatingly. In its early life it also had transitive senses of "to reject (food, etc.) with a feeling of nausea" (1640s) and "to create a loathing in, to cause nausea" (1650s). Careful writers use nauseated for "sick at the stomach" and reserve nauseous (q.v.) for "sickening to contemplate."
1. I began to nauseate the place I was in.
我开始厌恶我所住的地方.

来自辞典例句

2. Food did not nauseate her.
吮东西并不使她作呕.

来自辞典例句

3. He was afraid that it might nauseate him and he would vomit and lose his strength.
他怕这肉会使他恶心,弄得他呕吐,丧失力气.

来自英汉文学 - 老人与海