loathed 的定义
loathed, loath·ing.
- to feel disgust or intense aversion for; abhor: I loathe people who spread malicious gossip.
loathed 近义词
dislike strongly
更多loathed例句
- He falls in love with Sophia, the fiancee of a co-worker whom he loathes.
- The aim of history class isn’t to get students to love or loathe their country.
- The dramatic language, bolstered by damaging emails unearthed by investigators, paints Zuckerberg as Silicon Valley’s leading villain, one whom the public might be persuaded to loathe, as some already do.
- Democrats loathed him and Republicans loved him, with independents leaning more toward the former.
- Politicians loathe to prioritize as such, not just because it is difficult to do so but also because it deprives them of power.
- It is loathed by some critics who find it patronizing, silly, and superficial.
- And always in the background, evanescent but, in the end, accountable, is Rupert Murdoch—courted, feared and sometimes loathed.
- Never mind that the actual Steve Jobs loathed school for much of his childhood.
- The issue for the people of Egypt is that the security apparatus they loathed under Mubarak is still in place.
- Crocs, the colorful clog company long loathed by fashionistas, has stubbed its toe again.
- He loathed himself for submitting to her cruelty, for it was intentional cruelty—she made him writhe and suffer of set purpose.
- "Then I'll catch it," I said, laughing at his discomfiture, for I knew he loathed stirring porridge.
- It is but simple justice to the poor youth to state that he loathed and abhorred himself in consequence.
- What I actually did was to curse to myself at having to clean my teeth in bitterly cold water, something I have always loathed.
- Michael loathed Garrod, and resented his persistent instructions, his offers to solve lingering physical perplexities.