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Dictionary
is loathing
noun
Sense of revulsion, distaste, detestation, extreme hatred or dislike.
Exact(5)
Mr Bush, however, seems to believe that a corollary of loving freedom is loathing tyranny and that to promote democracy it is sometimes necessary for outsiders to remove dictatorial regimes.
But if I had to write her epitaph, I'd take the line from "Mrs. Dalloway," when Virginia Woolf's shellshocked war veteran muses, "The secret signal which one generation passes, under disguise, to the next is loathing, hatred, despair".
The problem I face now is loathing to work sitting down.
There is loathing of Mandelson higher up, too, in the cabinet of which he is not yet a member.
There is loathing of Mandelson lower down in the party, as he discovered last summer when the humiliating failure of his bid for election to its National Executive Committee was greeted with huge delight on the conference floor.
Similar(55)
The typical Reznor topics are loathing and self-loathing.
"I have to say, I'm loathing it this time.
But more than a few of our fellow citizens are loathing themselves blind over Barack Obama.
Then, the party did not simply disagree - there was loathing, contempt or hatred.
Mr. Lilla continues: But more than a few of our fellow citizens are loathing themselves blind over Barack Obama.
The extrovert enjoys his public political scraps, his voyages and his love affairs — even as he seems to be loathing all three.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com