"nauseated" is a correct and usable word in written English. You can use it to describe how someone feels after eating something that disagrees with them, or how someone feels when they experience something unpleasant. Example: After eating that spoiled food, she felt nauseated.
He declared himself nauseated by the very idea of fabricated plots and characters.
He will be the one history remembers as the hapless American president who has emboldened dictators to seek nuclear arsenals; inspired Russia, China, India and others to wage pre-emptive wars; and caused most Europeans to feel nauseated by anything American and to withdraw their allegiance to the United States.You also invoke Nemesis.
IN A tunnel beneath Stuttgart railway station, your correspondent was startled and slightly nauseated by a large poster advertising a sandwich filled with Fleischkäse.
Dr Redelmeier argues, gingerly, that mothers-to-be can be tired, nauseated, anxious and distracted by the big event to come.
His thickening, unhealthy body nauseated him.
For the whole time I was at grammar school I carried around in my back pocket an assortment of notes from my mother requesting that I be excused from PE, cross-country running, football, cricket and swimming on the grounds that I was bilious, hypersensitive, agoraphobic, vertiginous, allergic to the natural hemp from which gym ropes were manufactured, easily nauseated and afraid of water.
At times, we seem to be watching a kind of media-age "Sunset Boulevard": there's the lonely, wealthy wreck in a big Hollywood crypt, and a younger prisoner who's slightly nauseated.
I love the desktop app, it’s always running on my Mac. Ludwig is the best English buddy, it answers my 100 queries per day and stays cool.
Cristina Valenza
Retail Lead Linguist @ Apple Inc.