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The phrase 'in loathing' is correct and can be used in written English.
It means to feel intense dislike or hatred towards something or someone. Example: She glared at her ex-boyfriend in loathing as she walked past him on the street. It can also be used in a more abstract sense, such as: The politician's actions were met with in loathing by the public.
Exact(10)
That supposed repository of forbidden truths gave Breton a base from which to assault a society that he was not alone in loathing.
Islamists and leftists are similarly united in loathing the peace treaty Anwar Sadat signed with the country many still call "the Zionist enemy".
FOR every spark that leaps across the partitions of office cubicles and ignites romance, there are undoubtedly a dozen office interactions that end in loathing.
" That's fine as far as it goes, but there's no hint of the unpleasantries that accompany this tale: the storms of tears, the murder, the hideously destructive power of fear, the casual brutishness of the human race, the adultery rooted in loathing, the banality of evil to which humans gravitate with gross enthusiasm and the bad taste that so often accompanies it.
As a Downing Street insider observed: "He's a bit short of playmates at these things".Most of all, Mr Blair worries about what he describes as a coming together of the left and the far right in Europe, united in loathing both America and globalisation.
Bowing to his party's Euroskeptics, he's broken with the conservative mainstream in the European Union — the parties of French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel — and hopped into bed with a band of central European right-wingers united only in loathing for European federalism.
Similar(50)
Roger walks out of the speech in anger, loathing his apparent descent in value to the agency.
Most of these centres are located in areas like Erkin's – caught up in fear, loathing and mistrust.
But there was lament in my loathing.
The American lawyer suffering from fear and loathing in Dubai in Joseph O'Neill's "The Dog" (2014) calls himself X.
This won him respect in western Canada, but rekindled nationalist loathing in Quebec.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com