Use "detest" in a sentence

1. I detest people complaining.

2. 'Detestable' is a derivative of 'detest'.

3. I detest all affectation.

4. I detest violence with my whole being.

5. They cordially detest each other.

6. He added: “I detest the operation.

7. I detest this part of the world.

8. I detest the name Meghann.

9. I detest people who tell lies.

10. I detest conversation in the past tense.

11. I thoroughly detest writing letters to her.

12. I detest any form of cruelty toward animals.

13. All men come to detest them.

14. I detest any kind of cruelty.

15. And it is a loathsome term, I detest it.

16. Elites always detest gifted and nimble outsiders.

17. I detest cheese; I can't eat it.

18. 28 I thoroughly detest writing letters to her.

19. Abhorrent (9 Occurrences) Leviticus 11:11 and you detest them

20. Abominer (literary) To hold in abomination; to detest, abhor, execrate.

21. Who detest justice and who make crooked all that is straight,+

22. 6 I detest his grandmother because she is a backseat driver.

23. Abhor definition, to regard with extreme repugnance or aversion; detest utterly; loathe; abominate

24. Abominate definition: to dislike intensely; loathe ; detest Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

25. (used with verbs showing dislike) very much They Cordially detest each other.

26. Utterly abhor and detest it, for it is set apart for destruction.

27. 30 I detest the sort of ads that use nauseatingly cute children and animals.

28. You don't understand. It's not just that I don't like cabbage -- I absolutely detest it!

29. We detest with horror the duplicity and villainy of the murderous hyenas of Bukharinite wreckers.

30. Utterly abhor and detest it,[Sentencedict] for it is set apart for destruction.

31. To the captain I'd say there's little I detest more than an informer.

32. Hate, detest, abhor, Abominate, loathe mean to feel strong aversion or intense dislike for

33. You would plunge me into a slime pit so that even my clothes would detest me.

34. I should detest my own heart if I saw either pride or resentment lurking in me.

35. Synonyms for Abominate include abhor, despise, detest, hate, loathe, dislike, execrate, recoil from, shudder at and disapprove

36. We must also hate —yes, abhor, detest, loathe, have a strong aversion for— what is bad.

37. Americans detest all lies except lies spoken in public or printed lies. Edgar Watson Howe 

38. Some cats show no interest whatever, while others detest it and still others adore it.

39. You can win in the battle against debauched thinking if you detest utterly this world’s disgraceful course!

40. They could Be delight with the flowers and thank you or they could be upset because they detest daisies

41. I don't love you, not at all, on the contrary, I detest you—You're a naughty, gawky, foolish Cinderalla.

42. I don't love you, not at all, on the contrary, I detest you—You're a naughty, gawky, foolish Cinderella.

43. • The two casts of characters, although ostensibly Cooperating to solve a crime of mutual interest, detest each other

44. How does the verb Abhor contrast with its synonyms? Some common synonyms of Abhor are abominate, detest, hate, and loathe

45. Girls should detest sex too soon The ulcers seen on the irritated Cervices with prolapse are more often of the decubitus type

46. And they shall be abhorrent to you; you may not eat of their flesh, and their carcasses you shall detest

47. How does the verb Abominate contrast with its synonyms? Some common synonyms of Abominate are abhor, detest, hate, and loathe

48. 5 reviews of Confidentially Yours "I had grown to detest bra-shopping over the years, and Confidentially Yours changed that in one visit

49. These are the birds you are to detest and not eat because they are detestable: the eagle, the vulture, the black vulture.

50. 21 synonyms for Abhor: hate, loathe, despise, detest, shrink from, shudder at, recoil from, be repelled by, have an aversion to, abominate, execrate

51. Contemns definition: look down on with disdain synonyms: hate, look down on, despise, detest, disdain, scorn antonyms: love, admire, philogyny, benevolence, like

52. Contemning definition: look down on with disdain synonyms: hate, look down on, despise, detest, disdain, scorn antonyms: love, admire, philogyny, benevolence, like

53. (Abhorr) To regard with horror or detestation; to shrink back with shuddering from; to feel excessive repugnance toward; to detest to extremity; to loathe

54. 13 I detest racialism, because I regard it as a barbaric thing, whether it comes from a black man or a white man.

55. Abhor something to hate something, for example a way of behaving or thinking, especially for moral reasons synonym detest, loathe Most decent people Abhor corruption in government

56. (Hebrews 1:9) If we, like Jesus, desire Jehovah’s blessing, we must detest the badness, the immorality, the violence, and the greed of Satan’s proud world.

57. Abominate verb hate, dislike, loathe, despise, detest, abhor, shudder at, recoil from, regard with repugnance, feel repelled by, have an aversion to, execrate, feel hostile to 'I Abominate dogma,' he said

58. Abominate verb hate, dislike, loathe, despise, detest, abhor, shudder at, recoil from, regard with repugnance, feel repelled by, have an aversion to, execrate, feel hostile to 'I Abominate dogma,' he said

59. There are many synonyms of Abhorring which include Abominate, Despise, Detest, Hate, Loathe, Scorn, Be Allergic To, Be Down On, Be Grossed Out By, etc.

60. 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

61. 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

62. Abominate (third-person singular simple present abominates, present participle Abominating, simple past and past participle abominated) To feel disgust towards; to loathe or detest thoroughly; to hate in the highest degree, as if with religious dread

63. “ Abhorreth ” תְּתַעֵ֣ב: To loathe, i.e., (morally) detest: Abhorreth “ all manner ” כָּל: Properly, the whole; hence, all, any or every (in the singular only, but often in a plural sense) all manner “ of meat; ” אֹ֭כֶל: Food: meat “ and they draw near ” וַ֝יַּגִּ֗יעוּ

64. After his sentence was read, the elderly scientist, kneeling and dressed as a penitent, solemnly pronounced: “I do abjure, curse, and detest the said errors and heresies [the Copernican theory] and in general all and any other error, heresy, or sect contrary to the Holy Church.”

65. For even the Admonitioners themselves (which said that they did strive for true religion, and wished the parliament even with perfect hatred to detest the church of England, whereof notwithstanding they were members), even they do say how they (meaning the bishops and their partakers) hold the substance of religion with us, and we with them.

66. In contexttransitivelang=en terms the difference between Abominate and abhor is that Abominate is {{contexttransitivelang=en}} to feel disgust towards; to abhor; to loathe or detest thoroughly; to hate in the highest degree, as if with religious dread {{defdatefirst attested in the mid 17 th century}} while abhor is {{contexttransitivelang=en}} to turn

67. The Ardently Faithful detest the southerners’ deeming of our Holy Book as superstition; beyond a small, detestable minority I loathe as much as they, I have observed that the majority of the southerners, though swift to recall the dark pages of Church history, observe the Enchiridion as the word of the goddess Halone, the Fury, of the Twelve.