different between queasy vs qualmy

queasy

English

Alternative forms

  • queazy

Etymology

From Middle English coysy, possibly from Old Norse kveisa (boil) ( > Norwegian kveise/kvise), perhaps influenced by Anglo-Norman queisier, from Old French coisier (to wound, hurt, make uneasy).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?kwi?.zi/
  • Rhymes: -i?zi

Adjective

queasy (comparative queasier, superlative queasiest)

  1. Experiencing or causing nausea or uneasiness, often characterized by an unsettled stomach.
    • 1999, Lucy Honig, The Truly Needy And Other Stories, University of Pittsburgh Press (?ISBN), page 75:
      She was in the middle of a gigantic breakfast of coffee and piles of toast, eggs and bacon and a tall glass of milk. It made him queasy to see all that food.
  2. Easily troubled; squeamish.

Derived terms

  • queasily
  • queasiness

Translations

See also

  • nauseous
  • nauseated

Anagrams

  • Quayes

queasy From the web:

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qualmy

English

Etymology

qualm +? -y

Adjective

qualmy (comparative qualmier, superlative qualmiest)

  1. queasy; nauseous

qualmy From the web:

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