MIfeeling ill when you travel in a boat, because of the movement of the boat in the water 晕船的
get/feel/be seasick
Hal was seasick almost at once.
哈尔几乎马上就晕船了。
—seasickness noun [uncountableU]
Examples from the Corpus
seasick• Alec liked sailing more than I. I got seasick.• By the end of the day they were both suffering from a mildbout of sunstroke and were also feeling a little seasick.• Are you seasick after a sip of whitewine?• Chester and the Wordsworths were violently seasick almost at once.• They had always found buccaneering terribly alarming, and felt seasick at the slightestsign of bad weather.• Mendelssohn was seasick both ways on the trip by boat from Glasgow to Staffa.• It sounds like a landfall you might make after a long and seasickvoyage.• What a relief then to read Charles Dickens's description of the miseries of feeling seasick without actually being sick.
get/feel/be seasick• Alec liked sailing more than I. I got seasick.• Millie does it all the time and I get seasick.• My wife Terrie was feeling seasick.• And you were seasick and there was no wind.• They had always found buccaneering terribly alarming, and felt seasick at the slightest sign of bad weather.• You could get seasick at the topwatching the cloudsscudding across a fullmoon in a vastocean of space.• Mendelssohn was seasick both ways on the trip by boat from Glasgow to Staffa.