abomination 的定义
- anything abominable; anything greatly disliked or abhorred.
- intense aversion or loathing; detestation: He regarded lying with abomination.
- a vile, shameful, or detestable action, condition, habit, etc.: Spitting in public is an abomination.
abomination 近义词
object of extreme dislike, hate
wrongdoing
更多abomination例句
- Because of this journey, when I walk into spaces now, my identity is not because I’m an abomination.
- It doesn’t matter if you’re the sole fan of a beautiful abomination.
- As more violence is planned out in the open, the shrugging and lukewarm calls for unity are a familiar abomination that has allowed racism and violence to continue unabated throughout our history.
- Invoking the abominations of outsourced jobs, rural depression, and lost wages, he tapped in to neoliberal dysfunction and hitched the outrage to authoritarian rule.
- An abomination of a character, Hisler is unlikable and unwatchable, much like the movie itself.
- American sanctions on Russia, he said, were an “abomination of hypocrisy.”
- Everyone who loves India should mourn this abomination called Telangana.
- How about the Super Bowl this year, when train services to and from the game was an absolute abomination?
- Someone like Utah Republican Orrin Hatch had to know deep down what a procedural and constitutional abomination this was.
- Was this a deliberate attempt to soften his constantly repeated refrain that Obamacare is an abomination?
- Then he did what no economic Switzer has probably done before or since—he actually flung away the still burning abomination.
- In others wax tapers must be lighted at noon, although in the primitive ages they were held in abomination.
- Their admitted reverence for Sheitan constitutes an abomination which neither Moslem nor Christian can condone.
- With this they wear a low hat, an abomination called the derby.
- It was a melancholy sight—a perfect abomination of desolation.