abhorred in Korean

verb - abhor
소름끼칠 정도로 싫어하다: abhor
거부하다: refuse, veto, negative, disaffirm, abhor, challenge
절기하다: abhor, be exquisite, throttle
대기하다: abhor, wait in the wings, wait
극기하다: deny oneself, abho

Sentence patterns related to "abhorred"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "abhorred" from the English - Korean. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "abhorred", or refer to the context using the word "abhorred" in the English - Korean.

1. He abhorred violence too.

2. He abhorred the thought.

3. Christopher Columbus abhorred historical inaccuracies.

4. What does Abhored mean? Common misspelling of abhorred

5. He particularly abhorred an emotional approach to foreign policy.

6. When Frankenstein converses with the creature in Chapter 10, he addresses it as "vile insect", "abhorred monster", "fiend", "wretched devil", and "abhorred devil".

7. Ageists become the senescent figures they once abhorred

8. Abomination definition, anything abominable; anything greatly disliked or abhorred

9. An Abhorred object/ concept disgusts the person who Abhors it

10. Adjectives for Abhorrence include abhorred, abhorrent, abhorring, abhoured and abhouring

11. As you know, fighting is abhorred here at St Trinian's.

12. Rebekah even said that she abhorred her life with those wives.

리브가는 그 며느리들 때문에 자기의 생명까지도 몹시 싫어하게 되었다고 말할 정도였습니다.

13. That unsubstantial death is amorous; And that the lean abhorred monster keeps

14. He was a man who abhorred violence and was deeply committed to reconciliation.

15. Theodore Roosevelt understood the dimensions of the popular fear of " trusts " , abhorred monopoly.

16. After all, as scrupulous followers of the Talmud, dishonesty and corruption were abhorred.

17. Theodore Roosevelt understood the dimensions of the popular fear of " trusts , " and he abhorred monopoly.

18. A crime abhorred by all Abominate suggests strong detestation and often moral condemnation. Abominates …

19. He abhorred sterile polemics and was deeply distrustful in regards to fanaticism and sentimentalism.

20. But thou hast cast off and abhorred, thou hast been wroth with thine anointed.

21. Antonyms for Condoned include abhorred, disfavored, disapproved, despised, detested, disliked, hated, loathed, scorned and disfavoured

22. (2Ti 3:16) Jehovah’s reproof is an expression of love, not to be abhorred or rejected.

(디둘 3:16) 여호와의 책망은 사랑의 표현이며, 따라서 몹시 싫어하거나 배척해서는 안 된다.

23. Synonyms for Abominated include abhorred, despised, detested, hated, loathed, disliked, execrated, recoiled from, shuddered at and disapproved

24. Enoch was an imperfect man, a sinner, but he abhorred the willfully wicked, ungodly world around him.

‘에녹’은 불완전한 사람, 죄인이었지만 고의적으로 악하고 경건치 않게 행하는 주변 세상을 싫어하였읍니다.

25. She abhorred politics and especially disliked Washington, D.C., creating a tension that would continue throughout Pierce's political ascent.

26. I have abhorred your voluptuous life and had no regard at all for your presumptuous power and your tyranny!

27. Mr. Gaffney (United States of America) said his delegation abhorred torture and fully supported measures to combat that despicable practice

28. Find 19 ways to say AbhorrED, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com, the world's most trusted free thesaurus.

29. Bhagavan, who abhorred waste of any kind, decided to use all these commercially useless bricks to build a shrine over his mother’s grave.

30. Anti-Federalist Americans aligned themselves with the French, abhorred the British, and believed a strong central government to be inherently dangerous to democracy.

31. And he was an Adversary to Israel all the days of Solomon, beside the mischief that Hadad did: and he abhorred Israel, and reigned over Syria

32. Abhor = hate The shutters had been thrown back, and with a sensation of horror not to be described, I saw at the open window a figure the most hideous and Abhorred

33. 1658, Thomas Browne, Urne-Burial, Penguin, published 2005, page 6: Christians abhorred this way of obsequies [ …] ; affecting rather a depositure than Absumption, and properly submitting unto the sentence of God.

34. Inflections of 'Abhor' (v): (⇒ conjugate) Abhors v 3rd person singular Abhorring v pres p verb, present participle: -ing verb used descriptively or to form progressive verb--for example, "a singing bird," "It is singing." Abhorred v past verb, past simple: Past tense--for example, "He saw the man." "She laughed." Abhorred v past p verb, past participle: Verb form used descriptively or to

35. Aasvogel aasvogels abacuses abalone abalones abasement abasements abashless abashment abashments abatement abatements abatises abature abatures abaxile abbacies abbesses abducted abductee abductees Abhorred Abhorrence Abhorrences Abhorrencies Abhorrency Abhorrent Abhorrently Abhorrer Abhorrers abjected abodement …

36. However, Basil the Great (died 379) repudiated the views of some dualistic heretics who abhorred marriage, rejected wine, and called God's creation "polluted" and who substituted water for wine in the Eucharist.

37. Acid-throwing, rape and trafficking in women and children were considered to be on a par with murder, and all of Bangladesh’s society abhorred all forms of violence against women and children.

38. abhor verb hate, loathe, despise, detest, shrink from, shudder at, recoil from, be repelled by, have an aversion to, abominate, execrate, regard with repugnance or horror He was a man who Abhorred violence

39. Abhor verb hate, loathe, despise, detest, shrink from, shudder at, recoil from, be repelled by, have an aversion to, abominate, execrate, regard with repugnance or horror He was a man who Abhorred violence

40. Aahed aband abanded abandoned abased abashed abated abbed abbreviated abdicated abduced abducted abed aberrated abetted abfarad abhorred abid abided abirritated Abjected abjointed abjured ablated abled abluted abnegated aboard aboded abolished abominated abord aborded aborted abound abounded aboveboard aboveground abraded abraid …

41. Cleverly manipulating the Conservatives' internal differences, the Liberals under Trudeau (who had resigned and then returned) regained their majority in an election in which Ontario swung strongly behind the Liberals, whose policies on resource pricing they favoured and the West abhorred.

42. ‘Healthcare professionals Abhor politicians' interference in the NHS.’ ‘It also means sitting down with someone, someone who is not Abhorred or hated, to have a conversation.’ ‘However, it obviously cannot involve either, because the university is famously progressive, and hence Abhors both sins.’

43. Abhor From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Abhor ab‧hor / əbˈhɔː $ əbˈhɔːr, æb- / verb ( Abhorred , Abhorring ) [ transitive not in progressive ] formal HATE to hate a kind of behaviour or way of thinking, especially because you think it is morally wrong I Abhor discrimination of any kind

44. Abhorrent means disgusting, horrifying, repugnant.Abhorrent is an adjective, the adverb form is Abhorrently, the noun form is abhorrence, the verb forms are abhor, abhors, abhorred, abhorring.Abhorrent enters the English language in the early seventeenth century to mean in a position or condition to recoil, derived from the Latin word abhorentem.

45. Inflections of 'abhor' (v): (⇒ conjugate) abhors v 3rd person singular Abhorring v pres p verb, present participle: -ing verb used descriptively or to form progressive verb--for example, "a singing bird," "It is singing." Abhorred v past verb, past simple: Past tense--for example, "He saw the man."

46. When the Calamity we feared is already arrived, or when the expectation of it is so certain as to shut out hope, there seems to be a principle within us by which we look with misanthropic composure on the state to which we are reduced, and the heart sullenly contracts and accommodates itself to what it most abhorred

47. Inflections of 'Abhor' (v): (⇒ conjugate) Abhors v 3rd person singular Abhorring v pres p verb, present participle: -ing verb used descriptively or to form progressive verb--for example, "a singing bird," "It is singing." Abhorred v past verb, past simple: Past tense--for example, "He saw the man."

48. "A wording poet": Othello among the mountebanks For Biggs, Clysters were something "to be abhorred as a cruel and beastly remedy." Every clyster, he says, is "naturally an enemy to the Intestines." "Turds," on the other hand, are the "naturall and domestick content of the gutts" which do not "prick or gnaw

49. The first part of her lewd life with the young gentleman at Colchester has so many happy turns given it to expose the crime, and warn all whose circumstances are adapted to it, of the ruinous end of such things, and the foolish, thoughtless, and abhorred conduct of both the parties, that it Abundantly atones for all the lively description she

50. Christians abhorred this way of obsequies, and though they sticked not to give their bodies to be burnt in their lives, detested that mode after death: affecting rather a depositure than Absumption, and properly submitting unto the sentence of God, to return not unto ashes but unto dust again, and conformable unto the practice of the patriarchs, the interment of our Saviour, of Peter,