The role of nematic fluctuations in the pairing mechanism of iron-based superconductors is frequently debated. Here we present a novel method to reveal such fluctuations by identifying energy and momentum of the corresponding nematic boson through the detection of a boson-assisted resonant amplification of Friedel oscillations. Using Fourier-transform scanning tunneling spectroscopy, we observe for the unconventional superconductor LiFeAs strong signatures of bosonic states at momentum $qsim 0$ and energy $Omegaapprox8$~meV. We show that these bosonic states survive in the normal conducting state, and, moreover, that they are in perfect agreement with well-known strong above-gap anomalies in the tunneling spectra. Attributing these small-$q$ boson modes to nematic fluctuations we provide the first spectroscopic approach to the nematic boson in an unconventional superconductor.