vulgar or jocular. Also flusteration. [f. FLUSTER v. + -ATION.] The condition of being flustered; ‘fluster,’ agitation.

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1748.  Richardson, Clarissa (1811), II. xxxiii. 204. Bless me! said she, how soon these fine young ladies will be put into flusterations!

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1812.  G. Colman, Br. Grins, Two Parsons, lxxii.

        He felt, all over him, a mix’d sensation,
A kind of shocking, pleasing, queer flustration.

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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.’

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