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Discover Ludwig"it's nauseating" is correct and can be used in written English
It is typically used to express that something is disgusting or causing an intense feeling of nausea. For example: "The smell of fish cooking at the restaurant was nauseating."
Exact(12)
You might have no other choice, even it it's nauseating.
"It's nauseating".
It's nauseating because it's cyclic.
"It's nauseating to the American public".
One gif of a man seemingly wandering through computer hardware is so disorientating it's nauseating while others such as light reflecting off a spinning disc and a swirling washing machine are trippy and psychedelic.
"Everybody worships me, it's nauseating," Essendine (the expert Victor Garber) says, descending in a silk dressing gown into a living room that looks like the Art Deco lobby of the Savoy.
Similar(48)
It was sippable — colleagues described it as "crappy brownie mix" and "Carnation Instant Breakfast" — but the idea of living on it was nauseating.
The marketing director of the Breman Museum in Atlanta, Georgia said it was "nauseating" that Google algorithms directed users to a neo-Nazi site as the top result for the phrase "did the Holocaust happen?" He explained it cost the museum up to $2£1.6060) a click to direct searchers to its own site via Google's AdWords programme.
It's a detailed encounter that he offers up voluntarily, and it is nauseating.
The pain got worse and I'm nauseated.
She's nauseated again, and starving.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com