<adj.all> a nauseating smell nauseous offal a sickening stench
feeling nausea; feeling about to vomit
<adj.all>
causing or fraught with or showing anxiety
<adj.all> spent an anxious night waiting for the test results cast anxious glances behind her those nervous moments before takeoff an unquiet mind
Queasy \Quea"sy\, a. [Icel. kweisa pain; cf. Norw. kveis sickness after a debauch.] 1. Sick at the stomach; affected with nausea; inclined to vomit; qualmish.
Some seek, when queasy conscience has its qualms. --Cowper.
The junk bond market this year has been queasy, reflecting the potential impact of a slowing economy on companies burdened with heavy debts.
The judging isn't a task for the queasy.
Although many agency nurses were competent, sometimes excellent, administrators rightfully felt queasy hiring unknown and unpredictable contract laborers.
Mr. Hatfield said in an interview: "If you're planning to deal with Kagins on a long-term basis with the idea of getting your money out, I would be a bit queasy about it."
Its queasy sex-triangle wit is unsurpassed.
"Investors still are a bit queasy about dollar bonds," says David Wellborn, syndicate manager at Prudential-Bache Capital Funding in London.
Donna Pope, director of the U.S. Mint, which isn't involved in any way with the medallion, says it's easy to see why Americans would feel "a little queasy."
And, for those who might feel queasy at the prospect of going lip to nostril with a pet, there is a even a nose mask that's part of a pet-CPR kit.
From the random dress of the villagers at the start, one supposed that he was eschewing anything recognisably Czech; but for the wedding he descends into queasy, milk-and-water ethnic caricature.
Politically, it would be acutely embarrassing for him to allow the franc to fall sharply. Overseas investors who have already bid up the Paris equity and bond markets are taking substantial interest rate cuts for granted and may grow queasy about delay.