Citations:nauseæ

Noun: plural of nausea

 * 1815, Samuel Fothergill, The Medical and Physical Journal, J. Souter; page #344:
 * If we open the abdomen wide enough to let out the stomach, the nauseæ continue ; but they become impotent, because the muscles no longer compress the viscus : when we replace the stomach, the vomiting immediately begins.
 * 1817, Matthieu Joseph Bonaventure Orfila and M. P. Orfila, General System of Toxicology, M. Carey & Son; Chapter V., page #359:
 * Emetics, administered in the beginning of the disease, produce salutary effects, but it is only when the nauseæ do not depend entirely upon the irritation of the stomach, and that the bitter taste in the mouth announces a congestion of ( saburral ) humours in the primæ viæ, that they are indicated.
 * 1824, The Medico‐Chirurgical Review, J. V. Seaman; Volume V., page #20:
 * Next day the patient had nauseæ —the tongue covered with a mucous crust.
 * 1833, Baron Dupuytren quoted in London Medical and Surgical Journal, Henry Renshaw; Volume IV., №. 89, page #333:
 * For two days the matter flowed pretty freely, on the fourth day he was suddenly seized towards evening with colicky pains in the abdomen, nauseæ, and vomitings.