Dictionary
The revulsion
noun
Abhorrence, a sense of loathing, intense aversion, repugnance, repulsion, horror
synonyms
Exact(60)
The revulsion got my heart racing, my blood pumping.
The revulsion we still feel when women rather than men commit murders became revulsion squared.
The revulsion at BP was 32% the other week and Pearson, the FT publisher, clocked 37% yesterday.
The revulsion to anything that smacks of authority is about two things: the past and the present.
The revulsion at the crime is also widely believed to have stalled what had seemed to be a potent campaign to repeal the death penalty in the state.
The revulsion response is not totally specific, she points out, so we sometimes see things as a threat even if they aren't.
The revulsion expressed by the formerly liberal Decter and Podhoretz to the political and moral temper of those times left them railing in isolation for a while.
The revulsion over an outsider gate-crashing into a carefully laid-out soiree where only titled European aristocrats can gain entry is intense.
The revulsion some people articulated was hypocritical in many cases – the same people saying 'Urgh!
The revulsion at the time energized some to demand stronger gun control laws, at least universal background checks.
You felt the revulsion.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com