distrust 的 2 个定义
- to regard with doubt or suspicion; have no trust in.
- lack of trust; doubt; suspicion.
distrust 近义词
lack of faith in something
be suspicious, skeptical of
distrust 的近义词 10 个
distrust 的反义词 3 个
更多distrust例句
- That has never been more important than it is right now, during one of the most uncertain periods in modern history, and a moment when distrust and misinformation are rampant.
- The first was distrust in the Republican establishment itself.
- Vaccine distrust is often rooted in history for many communities of color.
- Nationalism is on the rise, as well as distrust of globalism and alliances.
- An untrustworthy system has created many who are understandably vaccine hesitant, while online disinformation campaigns are fueled by conspiracies and distrust.
- Bridging the divide between the police and those who distrust them will take more than protests and symbolic gestures.
- Liberals distrust business and anyone with power—better to tell them exactly what to do.
- Conservatives distrust public officials and want to shackle them with detailed rules.
- Bound together by mutual distrust, both sides end up lashing themselves to the mast of rigid law.
- Can you chip away at the distrust of the police among black people?
- Such mutual distrust necessarily creates or accompanies a lack of moral courage.
- Here was the strangeness of it: that he did not distrust Lettice, nor felt resentment against Tony.
- Robinson looked at him suspiciously as he took it, and the animals eyed him with evident distrust.
- On the following afternoon he found her, for instance, radiant with that exuberant happiness he had learned now to distrust.
- However cleverly the pill was gilded, the Marshal knew that it was the Emperor's distrust which had lost him the command.