Exact(57)
We'll carry on until the abomination that is Yarl's Wood is shut down".
Hitler's paintings are amateurish, but they certainly aren't an abomination – that came later.
I grew up believing that spinach was a slimy, tasteless abomination that came into the world in tins, like soup or ravioli.
Iris Robinson, a former DUP MP and the wife of the party's leader, described homosexuality as "disgusting, loathsome, nauseating, wicked and vile", as well as an "abomination" that could be "cured".
The next morning one of my guests sent me an e-mail message: "I have to ask you — beg you, really — to stop the abomination that is Gramercy Tavern.
They had many different ideas on how to deal with Tony Blair, the establishment, the special relationship with America – the whole legal, moral and political abomination that is the Iraq war and its aftermath.
As yet it's only a patent, but Airbus needs to realise that extra space would be nice, but eye contact is a land-commuter abomination that must never be introduced into air travel.
The Jets' destiny is ultimately controlled by the cruelest of the football gods, the one that loves misery (and probably also created the abomination that is the modern catch rule).
Similar(3)
Stand Your Ground laws are abominations that should be repealed.
George Bowering, a former poet laureate of Canada, condemns slams as "abominations" that are "crude and extremely revolting".
Saturated fat is at least a natural constituent of our diets, according to officials, whereas trans fats are essentially chemical abominations that can no longer be countenanced.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com