Dictionary
The averse
adjective
Having a repugnance or opposition of mind.
Exact(3)
Evidence suggests that a positive self-appraisal of health may mitigate the averse effect of illness or disability on life satisfaction (Diener, 2009; Patrick et al. 2002).
Ultimately, it has the averse effect on everyone involved.
Given its recently demonstrated [57] importance during WNV infection, the in vivo and in vitro elevation of IL-10 expression caused by mosquito saliva appears likely to be a key mediator of the averse effect of mosquito saliva on WNV infection.
Similar(56)
The Llewelyn Davies boys -- played at the performance I saw by Christopher Paul Richards, Sawyer Nunes, Alex Dreier and especially Aidan Gemme as the Peter who lends his name to the averse-to-growing up Barrie hero -- have charm to spare.
The larger is the inequality aversion parameter e, the more averse to income inequality is a society.
Perhaps the commission hesitates to make the designation because the owners are averse to the idea.
These donuts are not for the faint of heart (or the meat averse).
In the mature mixed stand, the cuttings were the earlier the more risk-averse the decision-maker was (Table 3).
The funds can harvest the benefits of volatility and illiquidity unavailable to the risk averse.
They are the most averse to making investment decisions until the situation is clearer.
(Bonus for the carb averse: you can request your lobster roll without the roll).
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