detest 的定义
- to feel abhorrence of; hate; dislike intensely.
detest 近义词
hate; feel disgust toward
更多detest例句
- Shanghai’s detested social life was forgotten, as were the constant pressures to conform to etiquette, the responsibilities of clandestine activities, and the unnecessary worries about my son … I was no longer afraid.’
- She said she was undaunted and in fact eager to repair the reputation of a much-detested agency essential to the country’s operation.
- If you detest vegetables and love fruit, you may wonder if you can get your five daily servings from fruit alone.
- Designers detest knobs and buttons cluttering their sleek dashboards.
- It stands, in short, for everything a leftist should detest.
- That gives you, I think, a very vivid example of the way in which some intellectuals detest democracy.
- “I absolutely detest the investment banking industry,” he says.
- In a Fox News survey, and that network knows its Republicans, they dislike her as thoroughly as they detest Obama.
- I do not hate the Palestinians, but I detest most of their leaders and their political culture.
- He can desire and wish only what he judges advantageous for himself; he can not love pain nor detest pleasure.
- And as men of learning are conservative in their sympathies, so they generally are fond of peace and detest war.
- They pay their addresses to the same mistress; but they cordially detest each other.
- The leaders mutually despise and detest one another, and universally endeavour to deceive and supplant each other.
- "I detest this voyage to Naples," he wrote to St. Vincent, two days before reaching the port.