A qualm is a sudden feeling of doubt, fear, or uneasiness, often related to one's conscience. It can also refer to a sudden bout of nausea or faintness.
Qualm (noun) refers to a sudden feeling of doubt, fear, or uneasiness, especially regarding one's conscience. It can also refer to a sudden feeling of sickness or nausea.
Word | qualm |
---|---|
Date | January 16, 2016 |
Type | noun |
Syllables | KWAHM |
Etymology | Etymologists aren't sure where qualm originated, but they do know it entered English around 1530. Originally, it referred to a sudden sick feeling. Robert Louis Stevenson made use of this older sense in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: "A qualm came over me, a horrid nausea and the most deadly shuddering." Soon after qualm entered the language, it came to designate not only sudden attacks of illness, but also sudden attacks of emotion or principle. In The Sketch Book, for example, Washington Irving wrote, "Immediately after one of these fits of extravagance, he will be taken with violent qualms of economy…." Eventually, qualm took on the specific (and now most common) meaning of doubt or uneasiness, particularly in not following one's conscience or better judgment. |
Examples | Some people have no qualms about correcting other people's grammar. "I also still do something that more than one passenger has found amazing…. It's this: If I think I'm somewhat near my destination, I have no qualms about pulling into a gas station or up to a store and asking for directions." — Ed Goldman, The Sacramento (California) Business Journal, 24 Sept. 2015 |
Definition | 1 : a sudden attack of illness, faintness, or nausea 2 : a sudden feeling of doubt, fear, or uneasiness especially in not following one's conscience or better judgment |
Tags: wordoftheday::noun
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