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Offensive to the mind.
repulsive
obscene
detestable
repugnant
offensive
Causing disgust or detestation.
disgusting
repulsive
obscene
detestable
repugnant
1
His manners are to ninety-nine in one hundred singularly
repulsive
;
brow-hanging; shoe-contemplating-strange
2
This result suggests that the observed trend is driven by
repulsive
interactions.
3
Clearly, the Council finds the recent activities of the Fomor somewhat
repulsive
.
4
Most people agree that at some level wealth starts to become
repulsive
.
5
Yet to us the system is not the less
repulsive
in itself.
1
They're pointless. They were
obscene
questions that dealt with personal, private matters.
2
He also let loose with an
obscene
epigram to the effect that:
3
The
obscene
display here was just an attempt to one-up the competition.
4
The
obscene
display of wealth, bling and power was making me apathetic.
5
His
obscene
face wore a suffering and preoccupied expression; then he said:
1
Above the general din he heard the
detestable
voice of the turnkey.
2
The national taste, in the meantime, was to the last degree
detestable
.
3
The vulnerable side of Tony Soprano made his
detestable
character deeply likable.
4
They'd be right to detest us: beside them, we would be
detestable
.
5
So I went on to a
detestable
brutal inn in the town.
1
I cannot imagine a more
repugnant
view for a candidate to hold.
2
As he contemplated his return to the Waziri the idea became
repugnant
.
3
Anything like free and open competition was
repugnant
to the general feeling.
4
The idea implies a right of veto which is
repugnant
to me.
5
A Lib Dem spokesman said: Cyril Smith's acts were vile and
repugnant
.
1
The fact that 90 of these offences were Covid-related is particularly
abhorrent
.
2
This
abhorrent
act has mutilated, injured and traumatised hundreds of innocent people.
3
It isn't only the betrayal but the end result I find
abhorrent
.
4
He said: Forced marriage is
abhorrent
and is little more than slavery.
5
The conditions under which the Spanish flu overtook the world were
abhorrent
.
6
The things he does are clearly more than transgressive: they are
abhorrent
.
7
As
abhorrent
as his actions were, kidnap was another order of magnitude.
8
The idea of accounts with his children had been
abhorrent
to him.
9
Fleetwood was the civiller; his immediate prospective duties being clear, however
abhorrent
.
10
On the other hand they like us, and find the English
abhorrent
.
11
It is
abhorrent
and we fully disassociate ourselves from the views expressed.
12
It is
abhorrent
for a wolf-or a man-to lose control over himself.
13
He said eating the carcasses of murdered beasts was
abhorrent
to him.
14
But there's something
abhorrent
about the attitude of many English rugby fans.
15
Mampintsha has maintained his innocence, chalking up his
abhorrent
actions to self-defence.
16
At first it did seem
abhorrent
,
but she glossed it over so-
abhorrent
so abhorrent
more abhorrent
abhorrent act
as abhorrent
abhorrent behaviour