Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nauseated. You mean nauseated.
Nauseous means you are making other people about to throw up.
Unless you trust the dictionary:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nauseous
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Hilarious when people try to police other's language and they don't even know what they are talking about. What a fool the PP is.
I know it's a thread from 2016, but from the link provided, reading further:
Frequently Asked Questions About nauseous
Is one nauseous or nauseated?
Some usage guides have held that there should be a strict distinction between nauseous and nauseated, with the first word meaning "causing nausea or disgust" and the second one meaning "affected with nausea." However, nauseous has been in widespread enough use for both of these senses that this distinction is now quite blurred. Nauseous may mean either "causing nausea" or "affected with nausea"; nauseated, on the other hand, is restricted in meaning to "affected with nausea; feeling disgust."
The term was being used incorrectly so frequently that language evolved to embrace the error. It happens.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody should be eating donuts unless you're working a manual labor job all day and burning 1000s of calories. Whenever I see office workers or lazy freeloading cops eating donuts I just shake my head. If you sit all day long you don't need carb and sugar bombs, ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nauseated. You mean nauseated.
Nauseous means you are making other people about to throw up.
Unless you trust the dictionary:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nauseous
+1![]()
Hilarious when people try to police other's language and they don't even know what they are talking about. What a fool the PP is.
I know it's a thread from 2016, but from the link provided, reading further:
Frequently Asked Questions About nauseous
Is one nauseous or nauseated?
Some usage guides have held that there should be a strict distinction between nauseous and nauseated, with the first word meaning "causing nausea or disgust" and the second one meaning "affected with nausea." However, nauseous has been in widespread enough use for both of these senses that this distinction is now quite blurred. Nauseous may mean either "causing nausea" or "affected with nausea"; nauseated, on the other hand, is restricted in meaning to "affected with nausea; feeling disgust."
The term was being used incorrectly so frequently that language evolved to embrace the error. It happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Majority of doughnuts in this area are underwhelming. They're fluorescent color nasty sugar bombs that are sickenly sweet and over indulgent.
A good doughnut needs nothing. A plain doughnut with coffee ...perfect. Can't stand the freaks of nature with 100000 grams of sugar.
Have your tried Carlson’s donuts in Annapolis?
Anonymous wrote:Majority of doughnuts in this area are underwhelming. They're fluorescent color nasty sugar bombs that are sickenly sweet and over indulgent.
A good doughnut needs nothing. A plain doughnut with coffee ...perfect. Can't stand the freaks of nature with 100000 grams of sugar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nauseated. You mean nauseated.
Nauseous means you are making other people about to throw up.
Unless you trust the dictionary:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nauseous
+1![]()
Hilarious when people try to police other's language and they don't even know what they are talking about. What a fool the PP is.
Frequently Asked Questions About nauseous
Is one nauseous or nauseated?
Some usage guides have held that there should be a strict distinction between nauseous and nauseated, with the first word meaning "causing nausea or disgust" and the second one meaning "affected with nausea." However, nauseous has been in widespread enough use for both of these senses that this distinction is now quite blurred. Nauseous may mean either "causing nausea" or "affected with nausea"; nauseated, on the other hand, is restricted in meaning to "affected with nausea; feeling disgust."
Anonymous wrote:Same for me, OP. I love the concept, but not worth the sickness that follows. But that's healthy. Our bodies know what is good and what isn't.