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By a weird coincidence, the young woman loudly retching in the next bed had, too.—Joseph Epstein, Newsweek, 10 Dec. 2024 Shortly afterward, he was seen retching in a field.—Heidi Blake, The New Yorker, 29 July 2024 The Bachelorette: Meet the 25 contestants hoping to woo Jenn Tran
Graziadei ended up retching after trying the concoction during the episode, before eventually giving it a very generous four out of 10 star rating.—EW.com, 29 June 2024 Friedel also points to a relevant source of inspiration for him and Glazer: the final scene of the documentary The Act of Killing, in which a war criminal — the genocidal Indonesian gangster Anwar Congo — also breaks into a fit of retching, as if finally overcome by what he’s done.—A.a. Dowd, Vulture, 10 Mar. 2024 There’s one scene in particular that will have audiences buzzing, or retching, or both — suffice it to say this is not a film to be screened at Lamaze classes.—Frank Scheck, The Hollywood Reporter, 4 Apr. 2024 By contrast, Garner and Helms are game for anything — including belching, farting and retching — but all their enthusiastic mugging can’t mask the fact that CC and Wyatt aren’t much more than a stereotypical surly teen and a stereotypical geek.—Angie Han, The Hollywood Reporter, 3 Sep. 2019 The camera then cut to the princess in the bathroom, retching.—Louis Staples, Rolling Stone, 18 Nov. 2023 There are two kinds of moms: the mom who retches at the thought of matching her children, and the mom who stocks her daughter's closet full of tiny nap dresses.—Woman's Day, 21 July 2023
Word History
Etymology
Middle English *rechen to spit, retch, from Old English hrǣcan to spit, hawk; akin to Old Norse hrækja to spit
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