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nethack/src/timeout.c
nethack.allison 6f0783dad3 grammar bit
<email deleted> wrote:
> On Sun, 12 Jan 2003 15:40:33 +0100, <Someone>
> <email deleted> wrote:
>
> >You begin praying to Anu. You are surrounded by a shimmering light.
> >You finish your prayer. You feel that Anu is well-pleased.
> >Your stomach feels content.
> >You are feeling mildly nauseous.
>
> Huh.
>
> sh-2.03$ grep nauseous *.c
> pline.c:        if (Vomiting)           Strcat(info, ", nauseated"); /*
> !"nauseous" */
> potion.c:           if(talk) You_feel("much less nauseous now.");
> timeout.c:      "are feeling mildly nauseous.",         /* 14 */
>
> Well, pline.c has it right.  Nauseated means feeling sick.  Nauseous
> means sickening to contemplate.

Second opinion (dictionary.com):
> Usage Note: Traditional critics have insisted that nauseous is
> properly used only to mean causing nausea and that it is
> incorrect to use it to mean affected with nausea, as in Roller
> coasters make me nauseous. In this example, nauseated is
> preferred by 72 percent of the Usage Panel. Curiously, though, 88
> percent of the Panelists prefer using nauseating in the sentence
> The children looked a little green from too many candy apples and
> nauseating (not nauseous) rides. Since there is a lot of evidence
> to show that nauseous is widely used to mean feeling sick, it
> appears that people use nauseous mainly in the sense in which it
> is considered incorrect. In its correct sense it is being
> supplanted by nauseating.
2003-02-09 15:42:42 +00:00

45 KiB