Disconcerted, frightened, annoyed.
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).
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.
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.).
1848. He felt considerable streeked at bein roused out o his mornins 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.).
1848. How do you feel? Rather streaked, I imagine,almost afraid to venture into the streets.Dow, Jun., Patent Sermons, i. 138.
1866. I begun to feel pretty streaked; I knew bears was terrible climbers, and Id a gin all the world if Id only had my gun in my hand, well loaded.Seba Smith, Way Down East, p. 68.
1878. In lessn a month all my money was gone, an I felt awful streaked.J. H. Beadle, Western Wilds, p. 29.
1878. I felt orful streaked, but I knowed [my rifle] had never failed yet.Id., p. 416.