squicky

Engendering a feeling of disgust, distaste, nausea, or revulsion, but without a judgment regarding rightness or wrongness (of the stimulus).

Adjective

  1. Engendering a feeling of disgust, distaste, nausea, or revulsion, but without a judgment regarding rightness or wrongness (of the stimulus).
    • She offered to show me the injury, but I find blood rather squicky.
    • You might remember at the start that I said SCP-3003 blends squicky body horror with a commentary on humanity. I'm sure the body-horror aspect is fairly obvious now, but the commentary perhaps not. - 2019 June 3,...

Origin

Etymology tree English squick English -y English squicky From squick + -y.

Forms

squickier squickiest

Related

squick

Derived

squickiness