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The phrase "a distaste for term" is not correct in written English.
It seems to be missing a noun after "term" to clarify what is being referred to, making it unclear and incomplete.
Example: "She expressed a distaste for the term 'failure' in the context of learning."
Alternatives: "a dislike for the term" or "an aversion to the term."
Exact(1)
Since independence, seven out of eight neighbouring countries have at some stage endured presidents with a distaste for term limits.
Similar(59)
He said his two criteria for the parties were that "boredom must be avoided at all costs" and that "our guests are either associated with me or will be associated with me, whether they know it or not". Mr. Lazar's friends loved swapping stories about his idiosyncrasies, including his obsession with cleanliness, or what he termed a distaste for dirt.
At the heart of Gopnik's book is a distaste for modern child-rearing methods, captured in the ungainly and ubiquitous term "parenting".
Here Kukla seems to confound a distaste for pageantry with a distaste for women.
A social climber who maintained a distaste for aristocrats.
Do you have a distaste for college crowds?
It also left him with a distaste for organised religion.
And both men have a distaste for ceremony.
Still, discerning Washington's true beliefs is a treacherous business, because his distaste for idealism often resembled a distaste for ideals themselves.
But a distaste for politics pushed her into business.
A distaste for dark skin seems innocuous to some Thais.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com