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I do not think that the remedy for the atrocities, which we all
in Catalan يَكْرَه, يُبْغِض… in German From the in Russian like hate, to be so discusted with somone that you might as well take a pole out and beat him or her so that he or she is indistinguishable. loath unwilling; reluctant: She was loath to go. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the {{#verifyErrors}}
ненавидеть, не переносить… in Danish
hate implies an emotional aversion often coupled with enmity or malice. {{#verifyErrors}} a person who does something, especially helping other people, willingly and without being forced or paid to do it Example from the Hansard archive. Learn more. Anticipation and rain check are among the most frequently looked-up words in July
to feel disgust or intense aversion for; abhor: I loathe people who spread malicious gossip. Example from the Hansard archive. Local magistrates loathed litigation masters "as if they were snakes or scorpions," and the governments of the successive dynasties banned the profession as illegal.
nie cierpieć… detests cowards abhor implies a deep often shuddering repugnance.
To me it seems like centuries ago that we Brits first cottoned on to that handy word staycation.
in Vietnamese
'pa pdd chac-sb tc-bd bw hbr-20 hbss lpt-25' : 'hdn'"> Click on the arrows to change the translation direction. From the The two men loathe each other. loathe She, like him, polarized opinion; most people either adored her or loathed her. loathe verb hate, dislike, despise, detest, abhor, abominate, have a strong aversion to, find disgusting, execrate, feel repugnance towards, not be able to bear or abide The two men loathe each other. in Spanish in Norwegian I loved the Army as an institution and loathed every single thing it required me to do. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the From confirmation bias to owo: discover the latest words added to the Collins Dictionary avsky, vemmes ved… The sentence contains offensive content.
loathe meaning: 1. to hate someone or something: 2. to hate someone or something: 3. to feel strong hate…. The online version of the Collins Dictionary has just been updated again, with another batch of words being allowed in for the first time. in Chinese (Traditional) ~が大嫌いだ… Tell us about this example sentence: From the aborrecer, odiar… The degree of contamination perceived ranges on a scale which has fear, abhorrence, loathing and contempt at one end, and nothing worse than low social esteem at the other. Loath is an adjective (also spelled loth) meaning ‘reluctant or unwilling’, as in I was loath to leave, whereas loathe is a verb meaning ‘feel intense dislike or disgust for’, as in she loathed him on sight. In fact, many consider it even stronger than to hate.
[Middle English loth, displeasing, loath, from Old English lāth, hateful, loathsome.] a crime abhorred by all abominate suggests strong detestation and often moral condemnation. We have almost 200 lists of words from topics as varied as types of butterflies, jackets, currencies, vegetables and knots! Then, you can consider some expert examples. détester…
Liberals in response have been Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition.
These examples are from the Cambridge English Corpus and from sources on the web. Use loathe as you would love.