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1 abhor
[əbˈhɔː] past tense, past participle abˈhorred verbto hate very much:يَكْرَه، يَمْقُتThe headmaster abhors violence.
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2 كره
1́ adj. hating2́ n. dislike, be offensive, hate, aversion, disfavour, disfavor3́ v. be repugnant, be repulsive, constrain, become hateful, hate, detest, loathe, abhor, abominate, disincline, shove, despise, dislike, force, coerce, compel, swagger, drive -
3 مقت
1́ n. detestation, aversion, odium, hate, repugnance, beak2́ v. abhor, detest, abominate -
4 أبغض
أبْغَضَ: مَقَتَ، كَرهَto hate, detest, loathe, abhor, abominate, dislike -
5 بغض
بَغَضَ: كَرِهَto hate, detest, loathe, abhor, abominate -
6 شاحن
شاحَنَ: بَغَضَto hate, detest, abhor -
7 عاف
عافَ: كَرِهَ، اِشْمَأَزّ مِنْto loathe, detest, abhor, feel disgust for or at, be disgusted by -
8 قرف
قَرِفَ (مِنْ): اِشْمَأَزّ، تَقَزّزَto be disgusted (of), be nauseated (by), be sick (of), feel disgust (at, for), revolt (at, against), loathe, detest, abhor -
9 قلا
قَلاَ، قَلَى: بَغَضَ، كَرِهَto hate, detest, abhor -
10 قلى
قَلاَ، قَلَى: بَغَضَ، كَرِهَto hate, detest, abhor -
11 قلي
قَلِيَ: بَغَضَ، كَرِهَto hate, detest, abhor -
12 كره
كَرِهَ: بَغَضَto hate, detest, loathe, abhor, abominate -
13 مقت
مَقَتَ: أبْغَضَ، كَرِهَto detest, abhor, abominate, loathe, hate intensely
См. также в других словарях:
Abhor — Ab*hor , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Abhorred}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Abhorring}.] [L. abhorrere; ab + horrere to bristle, shiver, shudder: cf. F. abhorrer. See {Horrid}.] 1. To shrink back with shuddering from; to regard with horror or detestation; to feel… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Abhor — Ab*hor , v. i. To shrink back with horror, disgust, or dislike; to be contrary or averse; with from. [Obs.] To abhor from those vices. Udall. [1913 Webster] Which is utterly abhorring from the end of all law. Milton. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
abhor — index blame, condemn (ban), contemn, disdain, forswear, reject, renounce, shun … Law dictionary
abhor — (v.) mid 15c., from L. abhorrere shrink back from, have an aversion for, shudder at, from ab away (see AB (Cf. ab )) + horrere tremble at, shudder, lit. to bristle, be shaggy, from PIE *ghers start out, stand out, rise to a point, bristle (see… … Etymology dictionary
abhor — abominate, loathe, detest, *hate Analogous words: *despise, contemn, scorn: shun, avoid, eschew (see ESCAPE) Antonyms: admire (persons, their qualities, acts): enjoy (things which are a matter of taste) Contrasted words: *like, love, relish, dote … New Dictionary of Synonyms
abhor — [v] regard with contempt or disgust abominate, be allergic to*, be down on*, be grossed out by*, despise, detest, hate, have no use for*, loathe, scorn; concept 29 Ant. admire, adore, approve, cherish, desire, enjoy, like, love, relish … New thesaurus
abhor — ► VERB (abhorred, abhorring) ▪ detest; hate. ORIGIN Latin abhorrere, from horrere to shudder … English terms dictionary
abhor — [ab hôr′, əbhôr] vt. abhorred, abhorring [ME abhorren < L abhorrere < ab , away, from + horrere, to shudder: see HORRID] to shrink from in disgust, hatred, etc.; detest SYN. HATE abhorrer n … English World dictionary
abhor — [[t]æbhɔ͟ː(r)[/t]] abhors, abhorring, abhorred VERB If you abhor something, you hate it very much, especially for moral reasons. [FORMAL] [V n] He was a man who abhorred violence and was deeply committed to reconciliation... [V n] If nature… … English dictionary
abhor — UK [əbˈhɔː(r)] / US [əbˈhɔr] verb [transitive] Word forms abhor : present tense I/you/we/they abhor he/she/it abhors present participle abhorring past tense abhorred past participle abhorred formal to dislike something very much, usually because… … English dictionary
abhor — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. hate. Ant., love. II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. detest, abominate, loathe; see hate 1 . See Synonym Study at hate . III (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) (VOCABULARY WORD) v. [ab HOR] to hate, detest or be… … English dictionary for students