0 past simple and past participle of sicken
2 to cause someone to feel unpleasant emotions, especially anger and shock:
This one will have the usual result—less land available, fewer houses built, more muddle, bureaucracy, with the poor citizen left muddled, bemused and sickened.
We all understand why they had to start, but their triumphalism has certainly sickened us.
The growth of human rights groups has shown that many people in the country are now entirely sickened by the conflict.
All of us will have been sickened at various moments when we have read of some new atrocious crime committed against women or children.
I am sure that they are sickened and depressed beyond belief and will call for a radical rethinking of the whole issue.
What sickened my constitutents was watching people shuffling paper and making millions of pounds in the process.
When one thinks of the nonsense of food subsidies like that for tea, one is sickened to think how wrong their priorities are.
He was so sickened by this that he had to sit down for a moment.