vulgar or jocular. Also flusteration. [f. FLUSTER v. + -ATION.] The condition of being flustered; fluster, agitation.
1748. Richardson, Clarissa (1811), II. xxxiii. 204. Bless me! said she, how soon these fine young ladies will be put into flusterations!
1812. G. Colman, Br. Grins, Two Parsons, lxxii.
He felt, all over him, a mixd sensation, | |
A kind of shocking, pleasing, queer flustration. |
1868. Yates, The Rock Ahead, I. I. i. 108. That Master Miles came out with pallid cheeks and red eyes, and in a state which the narrator described as one of flustration.