| subst. |
| 1. |
disgust - strong feelings of dislike |
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dislike a feeling of aversion or antipathy; "my dislike of him was instinctive"
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abhorrence,
abomination,
detestation,
execration,
loathing,
odium hate coupled with disgust
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horror,
repugnance,
repulsion,
revulsion something that inspires dislike; something horrible; "the painting that others found so beautiful was a horror to him"
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nausea disgust so strong it makes you feel sick
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| verb |
| 1. |
disgust - fill with distaste; "This spoilt food disgusts me" |
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revolt,
repel |
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excite,
stimulate,
stir produce a magnetic field in; "excite the neurons"
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nauseate,
sicken,
turn one's stomach get sick; "She fell sick last Friday, and now she is in the hospital"
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| 2. |
disgust - cause aversion in; offend the moral sense of; "The pornographic pictures sickened us" |
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revolt,
nauseate,
sicken |
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repel,
repulse force or drive back; "repel the attacker"; "fight off the onslaught"; "rebuff the attack"
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appal,
appall,
offend,
outrage,
scandalise,
scandalize,
shock subject to electrical shocks
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