Disconcerted, frightened, annoyed.

1

1834.  I felt streaked enough, for the balls were whistling over our heads, and sometimes a man would drop down on one side of me, and sometimes on ’tother.—Seba Smith (‘Major Downing’), ‘My Thirty Years Out of the Senate,’ p. 18 (1860).

2

1835.  I had proceeded about sixty paces, when a limb of some kind, (I know not what,) fetched me a whipe across the face … giving me, for the first time in my life, a sensible idea of the Georgia expression, “feeling streaked;” for my face actually felt as though it was covered with streaks of fire and streaks of ice.—A. B. Longstreet, ‘Georgia Scenes,’ p. 190.

3

1836.  Without the least scruple, they [the Droneville people] use those rank provincialisms, which would make the most legitimate Yankee tongue of other parts, feel “considerably streaked.”Yale Lit. Mag., i. 26 (Feb.).

4

1848.  He felt considerable streeked at bein’ roused out o’ his mornin’s nap for nothin’; so, altogether he felt sorter wolfish, and lookin’ at the strannger darned savagerous, says, “Who the hell are you?”—W. E. Burton, ‘Waggeries,’ p. 16 (Phila.).

5

1848.  How do you feel? Rather streaked, I imagine,—almost afraid to venture into the streets.—Dow, Jun., ‘Patent Sermons,’ i. 138.

6

1866.  I begun to feel pretty streaked; I knew bears was terrible climbers, and I’d a gin all the world if I’d only had my gun in my hand, well loaded.—Seba Smith, ‘’Way Down East,’ p. 68.

7

1878.  In less’n a month all my money was gone, an’ I felt awful streaked.—J. H. Beadle, ‘Western Wilds,’ p. 29.

8

1878.  I felt orful streaked, but I knowed [my rifle] had never failed yet.—Id., p. 416.

9