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Joined:  Dec 2002 
Posts: 21  
stranger
 
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 stranger
 
Joined:  Dec 2002 
Posts: 21  | 
I have got used to speak Chinese for three years now. and there is this Chinese expression that I can't find a match in English, its a character made of a body(rou), injure(yi), and a shell (bei). Pronouced as ni. here is a dictionary entry for it. adj. (Simp=腻, Pinyin=ni4) greasy, oily, tired, meticulous  v. (Simp=腻, Pinyin=ni4) be bored 
  but I don't feel this translation is correct for the feeling I want to express... It's a feeling that when you eat too much of greasy food, you can't take it anymore, because you are NI.
  ax
  Play Chinese Squabble at www.chinesesquabble.com 
 
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Joined:  Oct 2001 
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veteran 
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veteran 
Joined:  Oct 2001 
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you can't take it anymore, because you are NI
  ... because you are surfeited.
  A-H: n. Overindulgence in food or drink.  The result of such overindulgence; satiety or disgust. 
 
 
  
 
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Joined:  Dec 2002 
Posts: 21  
stranger
 
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 stranger
 
Joined:  Dec 2002 
Posts: 21  | 
cool...I just checked my random house...judging from the root of sur- = over- and -fait = to do, can you also say, I am overdone?
  ax
  Play Chinese Squabble at www.chinesesquabble.com 
 
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Joined:  Jan 2004 
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veteran 
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veteran 
Joined:  Jan 2004 
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can you also say, I am overdone?
  Makes you sound like a steak that has been cooked too much.
 
  
 
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Joined:  Apr 2000 
Posts: 10,542  
Carpal Tunnel 
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Carpal Tunnel 
Joined:  Apr 2000 
Posts: 10,542  | 
crapulous - marked by overindulgence in food or drink; hence crapulousness, such a state 
  but this is probably too general a term :)
 
  
 
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Joined:  Mar 2000 
Posts: 11,613  
Carpal Tunnel 
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Carpal Tunnel 
Joined:  Mar 2000 
Posts: 11,613  | 
 can you also say, I am overdone?  jheem was right, anton.  Overdone is not an adjective that applies to humans--except maybe among cannibals, she said as a lame joke.  Use it as a verb, regarding humans:  we overdo things.   Surfeit can apply to anything that there has been too much of, not just food.  To my knowledge, we don't have words (adjectives) that apply to a particular kind of food, greasy or otherwise--to describe how we feel after eating them, I mean.  We can be overfull (I use 'stuffed' fairly often, having picked up its usage from a friend) of pie or fish, etc., or feel sick from eating too much greasy food; but I can't think of any words we use that would automatically let others know what kind of food we had eaten to make us feel that way.
 
  
 
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Joined:  Oct 2000 
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Carpal Tunnel 
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Carpal Tunnel 
Joined:  Oct 2000 
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sated--or satiated comes to mind  but in the venacular, "I'm stuffed!" --but it tend to apply to any over eating (like after thanksgiving dinner)
  the sick feeling-- might well be 'upset stomach'-- does any one remember "That's one greasy meatball!" commercail?  what words were used to describe what the actor was feeling and how to make him feel better..
  --bloatted--is currently being use in one commercial.. the feeling ones body is distended and blown up with food and gas..
 
  
 
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Joined:  Dec 2000 
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Carpal Tunnel 
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Carpal Tunnel 
Joined:  Dec 2000 
Posts: 13,803  | 
Then, when one is sated one might be said to be logy.
  Less formally, one might say, "I'm coffeed (or whatever, verbing a noun in the process) out.
 
  
 
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