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nauseating

American  
[naw-zee-ey-ting, -zhee-, -see-, -shee-] / ˈnɔ ziˌeɪ tɪŋ, -ʒi-, -si-, -ʃi- /

adjective

  1. causing sickness of the stomach; nauseous.

  2. such as to cause contempt, disgust, loathing, etc..

    I had to listen to the whole nauseating story.


Usage

What does nauseating mean? Nauseating means causing nausea—a feeling of sickness in your stomach, as if you might vomit. Nauseating is commonly used as an adjective, but it can also be used as the continuous tense (-ing form) of the verb nauseate, meaning to cause nausea, as in That smell is nauseating me.  The adjective nauseous can be used to mean the same thing as nauseating, but nauseous is much more commonly used to mean the same thing as nauseated—feeling nausea. The word nausea can also be used in a figurative way meaning a feeling of disgust, revulsion, or repulsion, and nauseating can describe someone or something that makes a person feel this, meaning the same thing as disgusting, as in Their cruelty is nauseating. The word nauseant can also mean causing or producing nausea, but it is not commonly used other than in a medical context. Example: I’m not sure what was more nauseating—the disgusting food or the server’s disgusting comments.

Commonly Confused

See nauseous.

Other Word Forms

Etymology

Origin of nauseating

First recorded in 1635–45; nauseat(e) + -ing 2

Explanation

Something nauseating makes you feel sick to your stomach. Your kitchen garbage can may be nauseating by the end of the week. A bad smell or taste can be nauseating, but so can a terrible feeling or a horrible situation. The prospect of speaking in front of a crowd could be nauseating to you, or reading about a natural disaster. The adjective nauseating comes from nausea, which is a sick sensation or a feeling that you're about to vomit. The root of both words is the Latin nauseare, "to feel seasick, to vomit, or to feel disgust."

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing nauseating

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Nauseating as this looks twenty years after the fact, “Reality Check: Inside America’s Next Top Model” shows such abuses were framed as part of the cost of fame-seeking.

From Salon • Feb. 20, 2026

Nauseating and suffocating, it lingers — in clothes, on hair, in bedsheets.

From Washington Post • Sep. 14, 2020

Nauseating and suffocating, it lingers – in clothes, on hair, in bedsheets.

From Seattle Times • Sep. 14, 2020

In his Mr. Nauseating video of last weekend, Mr. Trump showed us that he had all the class and cool of a misbegotten 12-year-old boy.

From The Wall Street Journal • Oct. 14, 2016

The Daily Telegraph: "Nauseating"; France-Soir: "A great farce"; Le Figaro: "Un long gag."

From Time Magazine Archive

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