| abhorrence |  |  | 
| n. (feeling) | 1. abhorrence, abomination, detestation, execration, loathing, odium | hate coupled with disgust. | 
 |  ~ disgust | strong feelings of dislike. | 
 |  ~ hate, hatred | the emotion of intense dislike; a feeling of dislike so strong that it demands action. | 
| disgust |  |  | 
| n. (feeling) | 1. disgust | strong feelings of dislike. | 
 |  ~ dislike | a feeling of aversion or antipathy.; "my dislike of him was instinctive" | 
 |  ~ abhorrence, detestation, execration, loathing, abomination, odium | hate coupled with disgust. | 
 |  ~ repugnance, revulsion, repulsion, horror | intense aversion. | 
 |  ~ nausea | disgust so strong it makes you feel sick. | 
| v. (perception) | 2. disgust, gross out, repel, revolt | fill with distaste.; "This spoilt food disgusts me" | 
 |  ~ excite, stir, stimulate | stir feelings in.; "stimulate my appetite"; "excite the audience"; "stir emotions" | 
 |  ~ nauseate, turn one's stomach, sicken | upset and make nauseated.; "The smell of the food turned the pregnant woman's stomach"; "The mold on the food sickened the diners" | 
| v. (emotion) | 3. churn up, disgust, nauseate, revolt, sicken | cause aversion in; offend the moral sense of.; "The pornographic pictures sickened us" | 
 |  ~ repel, repulse | be repellent to; cause aversion in. | 
 |  ~ appal, appall, outrage, scandalise, scandalize, shock, offend | strike with disgust or revulsion.; "The scandalous behavior of this married woman shocked her friends" | 
| loathe |  |  | 
| v. (emotion) | 1. abhor, abominate, execrate, loathe | find repugnant.; "I loathe that man"; "She abhors cats" | 
 |  ~ detest, hate | dislike intensely; feel antipathy or aversion towards.; "I hate Mexican food"; "She detests politicians" | 
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