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Discover LudwigThe phrase "became disgusted" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use this phrase to emphasize an emotion or reaction a person had in response to something. For example: When Sally saw how her neighbor had treated the stray cats, she became disgusted and decided to report it to animal services.
Exact(20)
Whenever Warriors Coach Brian Winters became disgusted enough to call a timeout, nothing really changed.
There, Joseph witnessed firsthand the hatred and open racism directed toward African American citizens, as well as the minorities serving in the Army, and became disgusted and infuriated with the actions that took place.
Though claiming to be apolitical, he says he became disgusted at Mr Gbagbo's attempt to hang on to power.
Webb eventually became disgusted by the Republicans' manipulation of those values voters, through what he calls "Karl Rove tactics".
He fought an ever-changing strike zone, battled a variety of injuries and became disgusted at the lack of support behind him.
A former member of Mr. Draskovic's party, she became disgusted with its hierarchy and joined the Democratic Party instead, which has also disappointed her.
Similar(38)
They argue that the concept itself should be renamed disgust propensity, i.e. how easily a person becomes disgusted in opposition to the tendency of experiencing something as 'horrid', or rather how strongly a person is bothered by it, which they call disgust sensitivity.
He said he had become "disgusted" with the biological weapons program, which had been denied by Presidents Mikhail S. Gorbachev and Boris N. Yeltsin, or had been hidden from them.
The possible reasons were worrying, and in descending order of probability they were: he had become disgusted with me, he had nothing to report, he had been sectioned.
"You strip away the denial, the rationalization and you come to the truth," he said, "and the truth is very painful at times, and to stare at yourself and look at the person you've become, you become disgusted".
It's a cryptic episode alluding allegorically to issues of German reunification, in which a woman visits an aging eagle at a zoo, frees it from its cage, makes erotic overtures, becomes disgusted, and kills it.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com