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Discover LudwigThe phrase "personal distaste" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express an individual's dislike or aversion to something on a personal level.
Example: "Her personal distaste for loud music made it difficult for her to enjoy the concert."
Alternatives: "personal dislike" or "individual aversion."
Exact(29)
Mostly it's about personal distaste.
But the candidates aren't the product of anyone's personal distaste.
If you pan a piece of music, are you registering anything beyond your personal distaste?
He has expressed a personal distaste for John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men.
Was it a question of personal distaste, some commercial consideration or just an unfortunate oversight?
Later, he riffs on our culture of sentimentality, nailing its fraudulence while professing merely mild personal distaste.
Similar(30)
Thirdly, in many high-income countries, resistance to the implementation of preventive measures appeals to libertarian values and to the rhetorical force of concepts such as "personal responsibility" and distaste for a "nanny state" [ 104- 111].
Mr. Coleman, a Rhodes scholar and the son of Bennington College's departing president, is known as a driven worker as well as for his distaste for personal memoir as a learning tool.
Andrew Cuomo's ladyfriend Sandra Lee is, of course, no stranger to the spotlight, but shares a similar distaste for the personal.
Lombardi's distaste for discrimination was personal.
But beyond distaste for Mr. Bush's personal style are serious questions about what Europeans see as his American-centric, us-or-them worldview.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com