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Literary notes about QUEASY (AI summary)

In literature, "queasy" is a versatile descriptor that often conveys both physical and emotional unease. Writers use it to illustrate a literal feeling of nausea—a queasiness in the stomach that unsettles characters in the midst of turbulent or awkward moments [1, 2, 3, 4]—as well as to suggest a broader sense of moral or psychological disquiet [5, 6, 7]. The term also finds its way into dialogue and poetic expressions, sometimes highlighting a character’s vulnerability or inner turmoil, as seen in passages where even the phrasing of a question carries a hint of discomfiture [8, 9]. Overall, "queasy" bridges the gap between a physical sensation and a more abstract, often anxiety-laden, state of being.
  1. Outside, the first harbor-swell caught the ship; she turned her face again, queasy at her stomach.
    — from The Blue Star by Fletcher Pratt
  2. I'm afraid my stomach's a little queasy.
    — from Hail to the Chief by Randall Garrett
  3. So let him go and carry himself to the isle of pipkins, and seek some stewed prunes for his queasy stomach.
    — from Forest Days: A Romance of Old Times by G. P. R. (George Payne Rainsford) James
  4. The ground still shook under his feet, and his insides were producing the queasy symptoms of motion sickness.
    — from The Flaming Mountain: A Rick Brant Science-Adventure Story by Harold L. (Harold Leland) Goodwin
  5. It was a horrible queasy falling sensation, as though the bar and the fight and the world were all dissolving into smoke around me.
    — from The Hated by Frederik Pohl
  6. But confound this tumid, queasy feeling—this restlessness, swelling, and heat—it was jealousy!
    — from Jacob's Room by Virginia Woolf
  7. I slowed my descent of the stairs and tried to place the uncertainty, the queasy foreboding I felt centering about my heart.
    — from The Secret Martians by Jack Sharkey
  8. And I have one thing, of a queasy question, Which I must act.
    — from The Tragedy of King Lear by William Shakespeare
  9. Who, queasy with his insolence Already, will their good thoughts call from him.
    — from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare

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