colliemommie (
colliemommie) wrote2008-07-15 05:51 pm
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You may be nauseous, I am just nauseated
Every time someone in pregnant complains about how "nauseous" she is, I can't help but laugh. I realize it seems to be a popular colloquial usage to use the word to describe feeling sick, but being popular does not make it right. I unilaterally revoke the Humpty Dumpty Law in this case. I don't care how much extra you pay "nauseous", it means "causing nausea", the same as "nauseating".
So, while I will not argue with anyone who claims she is "nauseous", I steadfastly remain merely nauseated.
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and yes, I am a dork and actually looked it up, haha
(Plus, the suffix '-ous' means "possessing', right? So it would kinda make sense?)
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Nauseous, meaning "causing nausea" is the traditional usage of the word, though "feeling nausea" seems to be a new popular use. It still makes me laugh though.
The first two definitions my google-fu conjured up:
Source: WordNet
nauseous adj : causing or able to cause nausea; "a nauseating smell"; "nauseous offal"; "a sickening stench" [syn: nauseating, noisome, loathsome, offensive, sickening, vile]
Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
Nauseous \Nau"seous\ (?; 277), a. [L. nauseosus.]
Causing, or fitted to cause, nausea; sickening; loathsome; disgusting; exciting abhorrence; as, a nauseous drug or medicine. -- Nau"seous*ly, adv. -- Nau"seous*ness, n.
The nauseousness of such company disgusts a reasonable man. --Dryden.
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