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Showing results for abhorrence. Search instead for ankarrende.
Definitions

abhorrence

[ab-hawr-uhns, -hor-] / æbˈhɔr əns, -ˈhɒr- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Domestic politics, including Biden’s own concerns about voter abhorrence for high gas prices, have kept him from making America the out-front example of fighting climate change that he’d promised it would be.

From Seattle Times

Comedians roasted the militants on television networks, painters expressed their abhorrence of the way they carried out attacks, and musicians sang anti-Taliban songs.

From New York Times

Police have described as an "abhorrence" an officer sacked over a relationship with a domestic abuse victim.

From BBC

Europe’s bonds were tested in the pandemic, and that process may have ultimately helped the Social Democrats as Germany set aside its traditional abhorrence of shared E.U. debt to unleash emergency spending.

From New York Times

Both are operatic types, making arias out of their affection and abhorrence.

From New York Times