-
There have been many sleepless nights and weeks of unabated queasiness from the anxiety.
FORBES: You're Not "On Track"
-
The result has been queasiness among investors, falling stock prices and rising capital flight.
ECONOMIST: The Khodorkovsky case
-
The growing queasiness over Britain's role in the war against terrorism may cause even more trouble.
ECONOMIST: Bagehot
-
Plenty of western leaders were hesitant to challenge him, and there were clear reasons for their queasiness.
ECONOMIST: The lessons of Milosevic
-
To overcome any queasiness about seas of red ink, analysts take refuge in ten-year discounted cash-flow models.
FORBES: Analyze This
-
Evidently, none has the slightest queasiness about their choice of nutrition.
BBC: Paris chefs kick-start a horsemeat gastro-trend
-
There is also considerable queasiness inside Mr Blair's own party.
ECONOMIST: British foreign policy
-
IMF's perplexity at Argentina's political confusion, and queasiness that any deal might boost Mr Duhalde, thus prolonging a government which has lacked the strength and will to take tough decisions.
ECONOMIST: Argentina's collapse
-
The eyestrain and queasiness from 3D is caused in part by 24 fps, and Jackson avowed that he and his crew haven't experienced any of that, even after "thousands of hours" of watching 3D Hobbit footage at 48 fps.
ENGADGET: Editorial: Despite shaky 48 fps Hobbit preview, high frame rates will take off
-
Prior research had suggested that ginger supplements couldn't reduce nausea during chemotherapy, but Ryan says timing is everything: By giving the supplement three days prior to treatment--which had not been done in previous studies--the anti-inflammatory property of ginger had a head start on quashing queasiness.
CNN: Ginger may help chemo patients with nausea
-
Later, when my parents had come home and neighbors began to troop in to say ndo sorry and to snap their fingers and heave their shoulders up and down, I sat alone in my room upstairs and realized what the queasiness in my gut was: Nnamabia had done it, I knew.
NEWYORKER: Cell One