nauseate
nauseate 英 [ˈnɔ:zieɪt] 美 [ˈnɔziˌet, -ʒi-, -si-, -ʃi-]
vi. 作呕;厌恶;产生恶感 vt. 使厌恶;使恶心;使作呕
进行时:nauseating 过去式:nauseated 过去分词:nauseated 第三人称单数:nauseates
- To nauseate one’s friends is to make them disgusted, sick to their stomachs, or ill. Generally this is best achieved by serving foul food or sharing someone’s deepest secrets with a sworn enemy.
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- vi. 作呕;厌恶;产生恶感
- vt. 使厌恶;使恶心;使作呕
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1. He was afraid that it might nauseate him and he would vomit and lose his strength.
他害怕那些东西会让他反胃呕吐,因为吐了之后就没有体力了。
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2. I still want to know what cow colostrum is doing in the dairy section (you know, the stuff that mothers--of all species--produce before their milk comes in--sorry, don't want to nauseate you!)?
我还想知道母牛的初乳在乳品部是怎样做的(你知道,就是那种所有的母亲--包括所有物种在内--在她们真正出乳之前分泌出来的东西--抱歉,不想让你感到恶心!)
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3. Finally, all those delicacies from mountain and sea began to nauseate me.
那些山珍海味吃到最后,简直令人翻胃。
- 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."
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