abhor 的定义
ab·horred, ab·hor·ring.
- to regard with extreme repugnance or aversion; detest utterly; loathe; abominate.
abhor 近义词
regard with contempt or disgust
更多abhor例句
- It likewise appealed to someone who runs only when chased and abhors going outside in the winter.
- Investors abhor inflation because it makes their long-term assets — mortgage-backed securities and Treasurys — worth less.
- While “Tangled Up in Blue” does not, by any means, operate as an apologia for police, it at times elides the responsibility of officers in creating a “Dickensian” narrative that Brooks abhors.
- We abhor abuse, and Element is not an app that caters to abusive content.
- That’s because Fox News profits from all the segments, all the interviews, all the comments abhorring these alleged scourges.
- But politicians abhor a rhetorical vacuum, and they have clamored to fill it.
- I rarely mention Hamas without saying that I abhor its values.
- Liberals are supposed to abhor that sort of thing and find less loaded terms where they can.
- I abhor the Hamas charter with its anti-Semitic, anti-Zionist, anti-Western, anti-democratic call for a Judenrein Palestine.
- They claim worshipping at graves and shrines is un-Islamic and idolatrous and abhor the Sufi use of music and dance.
- The most High hath created medicines out of the earth, and a wise man will not abhor them.
- The English public walked straight into the trap, although they abhor nothing on earth more than the duelling system.
- They themselves abhor deception and they distrust no man until they find him out.
- Let historians extol blood-shedding; it is woman's place to abhor it.
- Much as I abhor the title of an epicure, on the other hand I feel proud of the title of genuine Epicurean.