squeamish
/ˈskwiːmɪʃ/
squeamish
English
Adj Top 24,970
Ad
Definition
Easily shocked, sickened or frightened; tending to be nauseated or nervous; oversensitive.
Etymology
Origin obscure. Likely a merger of earlier squeamous (“squeamish”), from Middle English squaimous, queimous, from Anglo-Norman escoimus, escoymous, of unknown origin; and dialectal English sweamish, sweemish (“faint, squeamish”), from sweam (“dizziness, sudden qualm of sickness”) and dialectal sweem (“to swoon, be faint, be overcome, feel sick”), from Middle English swemen (“to grieve, make suffer, be faint of heart”), from Old English *swǣman (“to grieve, trouble, afflict”). If so, then related to swim (“to be dizzy, swoon”). See also sweam.
Example Sentences
- "He might have made a good doctor, had he not been so squeamish at the sight of blood."
Ad