Highly offensive; arousing aversion or disgust.
Sinònims
Examples for "wicked"
Examples for "wicked"
1They suggested romances: lovers in the forests; knights in armor; wicked enchantresses.
2The happiness of the just and the evil state of the wicked.
3And these indulge in subtleties in order to excuse the most wicked.
4But in the torment of Hell shall the wicked remain for ever:
5And I learned things all right, she said with a wicked smile.
1Otherwise it could fall foul of fair trade and state aid rules.
2He played 35 minutes Friday night despite a stretch in foul trouble.
3Senior guard Devonte' Graham added 16 points while dealing with foul trouble.
4Police said there was no sign of forced entry or foul play.
5However, the Phoenix police say there were no signs of foul play.
1The room was drab, disgusting; he wanted to get out of it.
2The girls said afterward, in recounting the scene, it was simply disgusting.
3All at once the poignant and disgusting attack of the insects ceased.
4It is disgusting, heart-rending; sometimes I fear my own energies are waning.
5Nothing is more disgusting than a face broken out in pus-filled pimples.
1Jensen nodded, although she thought the truth, however distasteful, was always preferable.
2I think that whole Married At First Sight concept is quite distasteful.
3There was something in the idea which was thoroughly distasteful to him.
4A resolution that is, perhaps, distasteful, but may also be only just.
5The double standard in this shape is not distasteful to the boys.
1The idea of suicide was revolting to the vigor of his manhood.
2Pleasure-seeking was universal, and even revolting in the sports of the Amphitheatre.
3It was arresting, revolting, terrible; it must have compelled in any case.
4The tones of the clergyman were no longer revolting in his ears.
5They seemed strangely cynical; there was something revolting in his deepening calmness.
1The whole place seemed to him hideous and loathsome in the extreme.
2The oysters had a terrible look in their eyes and were loathsome.
3The day brought forth another loathsome fact in connection with the case.
4That we're in debt, owe hundreds of pounds, the whole loathsome truth.
5So alone that anyone, anything no matter how loathsome would be welcome.
1The repellent effect was accompanied by a significant insecticidal effect on sandflies.
2So insect repellent, first aid kits, medicine and mosquito nets would help.
3Good on crackers but can function equally well as an amorous-skunk repellent.
4At first the idea of underground homes was completely repellent to him.
5She uses it sparingly; repellent, like everything else, is in short supply.
1There had been the engrossment of transcendent emotion in repelling the charge.
2At the beginning of the last century the latter were considered repelling.
3With the help of the repelling machine and by changing our course.
4Certainly we have been fairly successful so far in repelling their counter-attacks.
5Save repelling Dumnorix and Ahenobarbus, I never struck a blow in anger.
1If climbing before September, be sure to bring plenty of insect repellant.
2Mr Davies says they use industrial ethanol, methanol and even insect repellant.
3At least the repellant was still keeping the gnats at bay .
4She raised a hand with a repellant gesture towards the other men.
5Powerful, repellant, this prelude is almost infernal in its pride and scorn.
1These insects were of an immense size, and of a loathly aspect.
2Ad is a loathly little word, but we must come to it.
3The next moment the loathly vehicle was seen coming along the Old Bailey.
4She was unconscious of the loathly business the Colonel was transacting.
5I am the breathing impersonation of that loathly thing, I believe.
1The woolly red socks and checkered shirt are the skanky sleeping student.
2It can get a little skanky in there, but it's OK.
3I couldn't stand to think of myself wearing one of his skanky girlfriend's outfits.
4Someone spilled beer on my jeans in that skanky bar.
5They talked about boys and music and which Hollywood actress was starting to look skanky.
1But that did not detract from the pervading sensation of disgustful grubbiness.
2No favouritism can sustain a ministry which has become disgustful to the nation.
3Above all things, a speaker should guard against affectation, which is always disgustful.
4He turned from the memory as from sight of some disgustful deformity or disease.
5No one has hitherto claimed this disgustful and perilous situation.
1I haven't been to see her yet, she still feels too yucky.
2If they were yucky, I just pretended I was licking a letter.
3It was puffy and red, and scabby and sore, and altogether yucky.
4You forget all this yucky stuff, and it's really not so bad.
5He liked to kiss open mouth but he tasted yucky like cigars.
6I think that probably sounds more yucky than it really is.
7She took pills and yucky things to get away from them.
8She'd wake up and her hair would be a yucky, washed-out brown again.
9She's quite careful about it, trying to get every yucky drop onto the sill.
10Grieving on social media platforms often comes across as yucky and self-promotional even between friends.
11Sherbet Classic, for example, turns the Close Window button into a yucky little pink sphere.
12She confided, "I don't want to be a yucky old Breeder."
13If it smells weird and or looks yucky, it's time to get rid of it!
14Blame that yucky maple syrup on the weather LITTLETON, New Hampshire Bad news for waffle lovers.
15These businesses are big on the idea that urine tests are inconvenient, invasive, and, well, yucky.
16Even nearly real, 3-D-printed foods can seem yucky.