nauseate
verb /ˈnɔːzieɪt/
  /ˈnɔːzieɪt/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they nauseate |    /ˈnɔːzieɪt/   /ˈnɔːzieɪt/  | 
| he / she / it nauseates |    /ˈnɔːzieɪts/   /ˈnɔːzieɪts/  | 
| past simple nauseated |    /ˈnɔːzieɪtɪd/   /ˈnɔːzieɪtɪd/  | 
| past participle nauseated |    /ˈnɔːzieɪtɪd/   /ˈnɔːzieɪtɪd/  | 
| -ing form nauseating |    /ˈnɔːzieɪtɪŋ/   /ˈnɔːzieɪtɪŋ/  | 
- nauseate somebody to make somebody feel that they want to vomit
- The smell of meat nauseates me.
 
 - nauseate somebody to make somebody feel full of horror synonym revolt (3), sicken (1)
- I was nauseated by the violence in the movie.
 
 
Word Originmid 17th cent.: from Latin nauseat- ‘made to feel sick’, from the verb nauseare, from nausea from Greek nausia, from naus ‘ship’.