Use "distaste" in a sentence

1. His nose wrinkled with distaste.

2. I felt my mouth set in distaste.

3. Stephen pursed his lips with distaste .

4. She regarded the mess with distaste.

5. She tried to suppress her distaste.

6. Kathy looked at him with distaste.

7. "No, " he replied, with patent distaste.

8. She looked at his shabby clothes with distaste.

9. Joe had a profound distaste for violence.

10. She regarded the child with evident distaste.

11. Old Pete eyed the youth with distaste.

12. She wrinkled her nose in mock distaste.

13. He had hearty distaste for songs of pathos.

14. 26 She wrinkled her nose in mock distaste.

15. He looked around the filthy room in distaste.

16. Flavia watched her with distaste and some alarm.

17. Her distaste has since evolved into ambivalent fascination.

18. "No, " he replied,(http://Sentencedict.com) with patent distaste.

19. Jim looked with distaste at the cockroach in his soup.

20. Curing your distaste for infidelity by turning to men?

21. Alcoholdom Weekly is the health system of profound distaste

22. It also reflected growing distaste for violence as such.

23. He professed a distaste for everything related to money.

24. As Blurbs multiplied, however, the public’s distaste for them also grew

25. She grimaced in / with distaste at the thought of it.

26. 22 It also reflected growing distaste for violence as such.

27. She looked at the advertisement with distaste before walking quickly on.

28. 43 synonyms for Antipathy: hostility, opposition, disgust, dislike, hatred, loathing, distaste

29. 4 Jim looked with distaste at the cockroach in his soup.

30. 44 synonyms for Abhorrence: hatred, hate, horror, disgust, loathing, distaste, animosity, aversion

31. Her distaste for books was equalled only by her dislike of people.

32. I rolled my eyes upward to indicate distaste at this telephonic excess.

33. He held out his arms to Ion, who stepped back in cold distaste.

34. He wrinkled his nose in distaste at the acrid smell of the place.

35. Whereat Nicostratus beeing Angerly moved, she (to appease his distaste) pleasantly thus spake

36. She looked at them with distaste in their sensible shoes and thick bandage.

37. She looked at the vendor who cheated her the other day with distaste.

38. He couldn't conceal the deep distaste that he felt for many of their customs.

39. He couldn't hide his distaste at having to sleep in such a filthy room.

40. I regarded with distaste a group of sleek young yuppies in city suits, guffawing.

41. The Contumelious, or scornful turn of his nostrils communicated his distaste for her presence

42. At first he expressed distaste at having to pry into a close colleague's affairs.

43. Antonyms for Cupidity include apathy, dislike, distaste, generosity, hate, hatred, indifference, aversion, discouragement and disinclination

44. Huzzahs to Maggie McCool for not losing her ''cool'' about repercussions on her distaste of Brutifying biology

45. She took the wet gourd dipper from him, her nostrils wrinkling in distaste at the reek.

46. He was also showing a distaste for outdoor pursuits that ran against the grain of their family life.

47. With tongue and teeth he gave a tight rasp and turned away in boredom or vexation or distaste.

48. Having a feeling of opposition, distaste, or aversion; strongly disinclined: investors who are Averse to taking risks

49. What does Averse mean? The definition of Averse is having a feeling of distaste or strong opposition

50. While all these words mean "to draw back in fear or distaste," Blench implies fainthearted flinching

51. Glad that he had the shadows to conceal his distaste, Oscar shook it, and bid the boor goodnight.

52. Hank made a vulgar sound of distaste, shoved his hands in his pockets and continued on his way.

53. He was also showing a distaste for outdoor pursuits that ran against the grain of their family life.Sentence dictionary

54. Synonyms: Antipathy; aversion; distaste Hypernyms ("Antipathy" is a kind of): dislike (a feeling of aversion or Antipathy)

55. Victoria was not much of a Victorian, with her mistrust of the church and distaste for earnestness in general.

56. His fellow aldermen would believe in anything rather than an heretical distaste for the city ambrosia of the soup tureen .

57. Antipathy ( countable and uncountable, plural Antipathies ) A feeling of dislike (normally towards someone, less often towards something); repugnance or distaste

58. We merely expressed our absolute distaste for a sequel to what is arguably the greatest play in the English language.

59. Only gradually was the distaste of the Left for the National government shared by any appreciable section of public opinion.

60. At some point Atour served in the Janissariad during the Balduran Civil War which left a distaste for government in his

61. The fact that the adult American Negro female emerges a formidable character is often met with Amazement, distaste and even belligerance

62. 28 She couldn't see his expression but it didn't take a fool to realise that distaste and contempt must lurk there.

63. She was shuddering in distaste when Travis came in carrying an armful of kindling, which he tossed down by the fire.

64. Now, I showed this to a physicist friend of mine who has a profound distaste for biology, and he says, " That's easy!

65. Another group, the Slavophiles, enthusiastically favored the Slavs and their culture and customs, and had a distaste for Modernizers and their culture and customs.

66. Abhor, hate, loathe, despise, abominate, execrate, regard with disgust, feel disgust for, feel repugnance towards, feel distaste for, shrink from, recoil from

67. Now, I showed this to a physicist friend of mine who has a profound distaste for biology, and he says, "That’s easy!

68. You better don't play this, if you feel familiar with any of the following attributes: acrophobia, bad timing, distaste for green tacky slime.

69. Definition of Averse : having an active feeling of repugnance, dislike, or distaste — usually used with to She was not Averse to taking chances

70. Distaste about the alleged architect of Lockerbie's readmission into the world leaders' club lingered in many circles, not least among the US victims' families and their supporters.

71. Antipathy noun hostility, opposition, disgust, dislike, hatred, loathing, distaste, animosity, aversion, antagonism, enmity, rancour, bad blood, incompatibility, ill will, animus, repulsion, abhorrence, repugnance, odium, contrariety She'd often spoken of her Antipathy towards London.

72. He was offering royal dishes daily to God , but God would not accept them saying that he had developed a distaste for those sweets after tasting ambali or simple porridge in Channayya ' s house .

73. The adjective Averse means having a feeling of opposition, distaste, or repugnance. As Kenneth Wilson points out in the usage notes below, we're most often " Averse to (rarely from) things and people we dislike."

74. As nouns the difference between empathy and Antipathy is that empathy is the intellectual identification of the thoughts, feelings, or state of another person while Antipathy is contrariety or opposition in feeling; settled aversion or dislike; repugnance; distaste.

75. So use of Burma can indicate non-recognition for the military junta, use of Myanmar can indicate a distaste for the colonial powers past who called the country Burma, and interchangeable use of both can indicate no particular preference

76. Adverse, usually applied to things, often means "harmful" or "unfavorable" and is used in instances like "adverse effects from the medication." Averse usually applies to people and means "having a feeling of distaste or dislike."

77. Adverse, usually applied to things, often means "harmful" or "unfavorable" and is used in instances like "Adverse effects from the medication." Averse usually applies to people and means "having a feeling of distaste or dislike."

78. Conniving From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Conniving con‧niv‧ing / kəˈnaɪvɪŋ / adjective LET/ALLOW a Conniving person secretly tries to gain something or harm someone – used to show disapproval Examples from the Corpus Conniving • Fourthly, Hopkins was a Conniving priest , a possible Templar, with an open distaste

79. As nouns the difference between Antipathy and apathy is that Antipathy is contrariety or opposition in feeling; settled aversion or dislike; repugnance; distaste while apathy is complete lack of emotion or motivation about a person, activity, or object; depression; lack of interest or enthusiasm; disinterest.

80. The adjective Antipathetic and noun antipathy come from the Greek antipathes, "an opposition of feeling," and its roots anti, "opposite," and pathein, "to suffer or feel." It's not quite full-on hatred, but an Antipathetic feeling is a strong aversion or distaste.