How To Use Distaste In A Sentence

  • Hmph. I not only sneer at the ornateness of the furniture, I sneer at the people who purchase such trash, and in fact, it is so distasteful, I regret I must extend that sneer to include the entire nation. Rare Michael Jackson Portrait By Andy Warhol Up For Sale
  • I felt a revulsion against the long isolation that writing imposes, the claustration, the sense of exclusion; I experienced a thrill of distaste for the alternative life that writing is supposed to represent.
  • Nekkid girls and boobies alert, distasteful showiness of much skin, and they all wanna fight each other in order to be the Queen of wherever the heck they are. Anime Preview: Spring 2009 First Impressions – Batch 1 « Undercover
  • His classical treatment of the subject is worth serious reference; for it should be realised that Lincoln, who had both to learn his new trade of statecraft and to exercise it in a terrible emergency, did so with a large part of each day necessarily consumed by worrying and distasteful tasks of a much paltrier kind. Abraham Lincoln
  • The idea of making connections to others mainly to advance you career can seem a bit distasteful and phoney. Times, Sunday Times
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • The idea of bossing anybody around was as alien to him as it was distasteful in his mind.
  • She wrinkled her nose in distaste as she placed her toiletries onto the night table.
  • My personal distaste for fey singers aside, British quartet the Buffseeds offer up a decent and quite listenable album.
  • She looked at his shabby clothes with distaste.
  • He seemed distasted a little at her talking as she did at first, as well as I, taking it, as I fancied he would, as something forward of her; but when he saw me give such an answer, he came immediately to himself again. Moll Flanders
  • It is precisely the libs paranoia and hate that distinguishes them from him & makes certain distasteful possibilities eligible for consideration. Jim Treacher has the Jean Schmidt voicemail. | RedState
  • Sergeant-at-Arms elevated his mace -- that "bauble" of authority so distasteful to the Puritans -- and the Speaker began to swear in the members State by State. Perley's Reminiscences, v. 1-2 of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis
  • Unfortunately, this species sometimes hybridizes with its distasteful European cousin (especially near urban areas), polluting its pure flavor.
  • So far, this book is only confirming what I thought: that the whole thing is distasteful and nothing to do with real life.
  • He remembered the unappetizing plates he'd found last night, and wrinkled his nose in distaste. DEATH SPEAKS SOFTLY
  • The cooler heads counsel to look at the big picture, focus our anger on the larger swindle or understand that we have to put up with certain distasteful practices if we're going to get this mess cleaned up. Lance Mannion:
  • The captain emerged from the cabin opposite Henry and surveyed the dirty youngster with distaste. 365 tomorrows » 2008 » September : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
  • From the deck I watch him negotiate the path to the outhouse, his mouth turned down distastefully.
  • The tightrope walk between self-promotion for the sake of viability and distaste for anything that smacks of selling-out has presented Stanley with a dilemma.
  • Take care also to have all of the legal formalities correct and in order - sun sign Arians are renowned for a distaste for ‘petty’ legalities!
  • Smith did not care much for loper in any form; the meat was too strongly flavored for his taste-but it, was better than nothing and kept them from digging too deeply into food they had hauled along, Dora did not share her husband's distaste for loper meat; born there aid having eaten it now and then since earliest childhood, it seemed to her a normal food. \par Time Enough For Love
  • Likewise, children are sometimes assigned schoolwork they find distasteful.
  • While you may regard the suggestion of “irregularities” “distasteful”, it is the irregularities themselves that you should find distasteful. Hugues Goosse and the Unresponsiveness of Juckes « Climate Audit
  • What follows is John's story. Parts of it may seem distasteful, even shocking.
  • Such literatures often reveal an authorial distaste for the social types involved.
  • By this time, I am a confirmed aesthete with a pronounced distaste for the great outdoors.
  • And the suggestion that my attitude to my own daughter is distasteful I find bewildering. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nor grew this familiarity (as yet) any way distasted, till by their daily conversing together, and enterchange of infinite pretty speeches, Jeronimo felt a strange alteration in his soule, with such enforcing and powerfull afflictions; as he was never well but in her company, nor she enjoyed any rest if Jeronimo were absent. The Decameron
  • She looked at him in distaste, smelling the rotten stench of vomit, and sure enough, he'd puked on the floor.
  • Lacking in moral or spiritual interests; worldly. aaah, but the difference in MY lil label is that a "sensualist" denotes a certain spiritual connectedness that can only be found through physical/material experience ... to quote and old addage ... the path of excess leads to the palace of wisdom you see, how are we to know ourselves if we do not experience all the world around us? how are we to say that something is distasteful if it has never touched our tongues? hmmm? ...JOIN MY NEW DIARYRING NOW DAMMIT!!!...
  • I began to feel an extreme distaste for him. The Crossing-Place
  • Some faculty members find the prospect of abruptly ending their academic careers distasteful and choose instead to postpone retirement.
  • His distaste for big inert words - words like omniscient, impassable and imperturbable, which he finds other theologians using to describe God - inspires his own desire for accessibility.
  • I find it distasteful that we've had to do it at all. Times, Sunday Times
  • Distaste about the alleged architect of Lockerbie's readmission into the world leaders' club lingered in many circles, not least among the US victims' families and their supporters.
  • The citizen who fears the ill-smelling drunk, the rowdy teenager, or the importuning beggar is not merely expressing his distaste for unseemly behavior; he is also giving voice to a bit of folk wisdom that happens to be a correct generalization — namely, that serious street crime flourishes in areas in which disorderly behavior goes unchecked. Broken Windows
  • In a documentary to be shown on BBC 2 tonight, he will reveal his distaste for pomp and ceremony in the Anglican Church.
  • June 18th, 2006 at 5:20 pm being a rather good fellator myself — the very idea of an odious toad like Snitchens writing about the subject is something I find profoundly distasteful ! Firedoglake » Face the Snark
  • With distaste, he went into his private washroom, swallowed a pill. FLOATING CITY
  • It was a spectacle whose distastefulness was compounded by the victory parade at the end of the shoot-out, when the young striker was carried around the pitch in triumph on the shoulders of the team's reserves. World Cup 2010: Rise of German romantics counters sense of injustice
  • Jim looked with distaste at the cockroach in his soup.
  • Every year it surpasses itself with kitschness and when you see it listed on the television schedule, eyes invariably roll to heaven accompanied by moans and groans of distaste.
  • The two men have a long, complicated, familial relationship, rooted in a shared experience of the liberation struggle; bonded, too, by a shared distaste -- even contempt -- for the postliberation-movement African politics that leaders like Mr. Tsvangirai represent. Mbeki and Mugabe
  • We have but one resource if such a proceeding is distasteful, and that is, not to vote at all, which is certainly unpatriotic. Laws Direct from Voters
  • He makes it clear that pursuing money is distasteful but having money is morally neutral.
  • They won't eat daffodils and other narcissi which are distasteful to them, but they find tulips and crocus irresistible.
  • In benign triumph the Cardinal draws Raphael by the wrist towards his niece for the contractual plighting of hands but she, noticing Raphael's distaste, is slow to unfold her arms.
  • It shared the distaste of postmodernism for totalizing theory and it embraced the counterculture of the late 1960s and early 1970s.
  • In LaChapelle's interpretation of the desert oasis, it is almost as if the city does not know that it is the epitome of tack and distaste.
  • Plutarch hath almost made a book of the Lacedaemonian kind of jesting, which joined ever pleasure with distaste. Valerius Terminus: of the interpretation of Nature
  • The idea of bossing anybody around was as alien to him as it was distasteful in his mind.
  • He and the girls, in common with the other members of the Comet Film Company, had to portray many different scenes in the course of a season's work, and though some of it was distasteful, it was seldom objected to by anyone, unless perhaps by Pepper Sneed, the "grouch," or perhaps by Mr. Wellington Bunn, an actor of the old school, who could not reconcile himself to the silent drama. The Moving Picture Girls at Sea or, A Pictured Shipwreck That Became Real
  • His distaste for publicity of any sort is well known.
  • • The use of an acronym like TQM for an intellectual concept is distasteful. QUALITY IS PERSONAL
  • Much of this has been driven by the American Library Association which, truth be told, is not among my favorite organizations, but my distaste for them lacks enough intensity for me to complain overmuch. In Favor of Banning Books
  • ‘Oscar's far too old for rabbiting’ said George sharply, eyeing the flea-bitten beagle snoring in the corner of the room with distaste.
  • The eldest of the trio, a paunched and jowled dignitary whose beard and hair were obviously touched up in a none-too-successful effort to belie his more than three score years, glared in distaste at the scene of action unfolding while the cachinnations of the general audience grew in volume.
  • The academics may find this distasteful, but conversely drone strikes will lead to peace. Times, Sunday Times
  • Never anything remotely close to condescending or evil, The Reader nevertheless suffers chiefly from a distasteful thematic overemphasis, though not far behind is the film's rather insistent self-flattery. Review Catch-Up: Doubt, Slumdog Millionaire, Defiance, The Wrestler, The Reader
  • Suitors are so distasted with delays and abuses, that plain dealing, in denying to deal in suits at first, and reporting the success barely, and in challenging no more thanks than one hath deserved, is grown not only honorable, but also gracious. The Essays
  • This belief, in conduction with the distaste for direct confrontation, often leads to a passive-aggressive response to the foreign executive's orders or requests (in the form of forgetting, procrastinating, or not following through). Mexico - The Social Perspective
  • It spilled over into a distaste for everything socially coded as male, from meat-eating to contact sports.
  • Such questions are distasteful for a fastidious cleric who thinks of sexuality as a loss of self-control.
  • He remembered the judge's look of distaste over his half-moon spectacles. THE SCAR
  • He was finding "a steadily growing distaste for political life '. THE GUARDSMEN
  • Was it a growing distaste for her task, or actual physical disability? The House of Mirth
  • The fact that people find it distasteful doesn't mean you can criminalise it. Times, Sunday Times
  • It may seem distasteful, but it's true. Times, Sunday Times
  • I imagine that in the famous ‘blue states’ they find the idea of having a holiday for confederate heroes at the least quaint and at the most somewhat distasteful.
  • Deirdre's mother Blanche is a poisonous old bat and the daughter Tracy is not only a bitch among bitches but what my dad would have called ‘a distasteful woman’ (let's leave it at that).
  • I cannot convey any idea of how distasteful the thing was to me; of how I shrank from the unpleasant conspicuousness of walking down a street lined with spectators. Aleta Dey
  • There was some mild distaste in his tone, which told me what he thought of the partygoers.
  • There's something a bit distasteful about the implications of much of the campaign, too.
  • As a democrat, I believe that minorities should be protected from the prejudices of the majority when they turn on pursuits they find distasteful.
  • He was defending his boss's publicly expressed distaste for broccoli. Times, Sunday Times
  • The manner of the change I find distasteful. Times, Sunday Times
  • She made a little move in which he read her slight distaste for all this splendour, for the empty civilities of the old Empire. DREAMS OF INNOCENCE
  • His tones made it plain that the name of anguished, God-ridden Darwin was as distasteful as that of any other forktail fiend, Beelzebub, Asmodeus or Lucifer himself. The Satanic Verses
  • She wrinkled her nose in mock distaste.
  • He showed a growing distaste for surrealism because of its perceived irrationalism and its criticism of the USSR.
  • It seems to me that Gordon Brown just hid his distaste for the old-Etonian better than his backbench colleague. Gordon Brown and the suspension of normal politics
  • The revelation of the secrets of futurity is sweet to one at first, but bitter and distasteful to our natural man, when we learn the cross which is to be borne before the crown shall be won. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • The bundle distasted me; I wished my work undone, and the hidden fate left sleeping in the earth. The King Must Die
  • I found it a touch distasteful.
  • She stared into the cavernous mouth, trying not to show her distaste at the sour, fetid breath. A SHRINE OF MURDERS
  • The idea that some of the questions we ask have answers in our past seems distasteful. Christianity Today
  • Although always a gregarious man, his distaste for some he encountered was barely hidden. Times, Sunday Times
  • Decent charities, aware of public distaste for such methods, have abandoned them. Times, Sunday Times
  • She loathes Hollywood, finds it distasteful and banal, hates the idea of her art being tainted by commerce.
  • I guess I'd be a capitalist in that I like liberty for consequentialist reasoning (lots of people flee their crappy countries for prosperity in the U. S, few go in the other direction) and have some distaste or even revulsion for libertines. Tyler on the Problems of Libertarians, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • puritanic distaste for alcohol
  • As a child, he had shrunk from visiting the serpent house at the Zoo; and, later, when he had come to man's estate and had put off childish things, and settled down in real earnest to his self-appointed mission of drinking up all the alcoholic fluid in England, the distaste for Ophidia had lingered. Indiscretions of Archie
  • Possibly you find the question distasteful. Times, Sunday Times
  • So that, according unto their dreames, and as they make construction of them, that are sadly distasted, or merrily pleased, even as (by them) they either feare or hope. The Decameron
  • Angharad was not used to being ignored and it was an unpleasant and distasteful position to be in.
  • The notion that a small group would disrupt the event for reasons of self-interest will be regarded as distasteful.
  • All the fawning and grovelling that goes on is very distasteful.
  • His stolid instinctive conservatism grovels before the tyrant rule of routine, despite that turbulent and licentious independence which ever suggests revolt against the ruler: his mental torpidity, founded upon physical indolence, renders immediate action and all manner of exertion distasteful: his conscious weakness shows itself in overweening arrogance and intolerance. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Now, he does appear to show a distaste for the slave morality of mediocre men, and yes, he does seem to think that the qualities of nobility are higher or better than the qualities of other classes.
  • As distasteful as this may sound, I just returned from Bali which is loaded with international tourist. 75% of these tourists are Australians and the buzz always references the couple of bombings Bali experienced killing about 50 mostly Australians but they are a hardy group and the streets of Bali are once again crammed with their tourism. Intimidation tactics becoming more and more like Colombia
  • If someone is unpleasant or distasteful, postings from that address can be blocked.
  • It is distasteful," said Dolly; "but the truth is I am so downright, -- what you may call enamoured -- The Duke's Children
  • All such placeisms are rooted in prejudicial customs and flower into full distastefulness and unfairness when people hide behind the unspoken prejudice of tradition, religion, or custom and remain either unwilling or unable to judge people as individuals. June « 2008 « L.E. Modesitt, Jr. – The Official Website
  • Too many Hollywood biographies are either poorly written, cut and paste hagiographies or spiteful, fantastical hatchet jobs that only prove the authors' distaste for their subject.
  • Two particular confabs afforded the group another shot at Amy's distaste of big-bosomed female superheroes, along with two new versions of Sheldon's infamous "Penny" knock. Tribal Chants, Dirty Twister and More Secrets From the Set of The Big Bang Theory
  • The first, whether from a friend or from a pawnbroker, is extremely distasteful; the second provides, for some people, a certain masochistic kick; the third is definitely enjoyable, but can seldom be done in a hurry. Try Anything Twice
  • Scales will fall swiftly from people's eyes as they contemplate this piece of Jackbootism on the part of Gordon Brown and his henchpersons and they will recoil in distaste and revulsion from conduct which most associate not with the home of Parliamentary Democracy but with the likes of Soviet Russia, Castro's Cuba, Mugabe's Zimbabwe or Hitler's Germany. Archive 2008-11-30
  • Debates emphasize ills to be corrected rather than distasteful choices to be made.
  • I ignored her snide comment and instead gazed around the house with distaste.
  • She had a distaste for the world and she showed it with a general lack of emotion and sharp tongue laced with venomous words.
  • I feel the same distaste this week as we see two striking examples of this kind of dishonesty. Times, Sunday Times
  • By the simple process of spraying the plant three or four times a day, until it is out of the seed-leaf, and the danger is over, it is possible in the garden to wash out the = Haltica =; and any kind of insecticide or flavouring, such as quassia, may be mingled with the water to render the plants distasteful to the insects. The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots 16th Edition
  • The geographical position of Mexico, the arid and desolate, herbless and waterless wastes intervening, would prohibit her sending any considerable assistance overland; and, all powerful at court by that time, he would take care that the Russian navy inspired Spain with a distaste for remote Pacific waters. Rezánov
  • The transparent attempts to come across as wise and selfless only increase my distaste for this woman.
  • It was, however, grossly distasteful, which explains why the vulgarian Janeane Garofalo wishes he were Mayor Weiner. Pawlenty of Nothing
  • Though Henry had expressed a distaste for elaborate ornamentation, much embellishment was added over the years.
  • But the second is even more worrying and very distasteful in the given circumstances, and that is the very well documented and repetitive scams and bubal deals, that were entered into by the displaced controllers at the time, but in the changed circumstances cannot face the light of day. Caribbean Net News Daily Headlines
  • So she glared at him with utter distaste, her beautiful blue eyes clouded with anger.
  • The idea of making connections to others mainly to advance you career can seem a bit distasteful and phoney. Times, Sunday Times
  • Both the caterpillar and adult of the monarch butterfly are distasteful to their enemies.
  • The eyes darted suspicion and malice at him and the nose was wrinkled in distaste. A TROUT IN THE MILK
  • Setting aside questions of personal distaste, this reaction was both extreme and wrong. Times, Sunday Times
  • She regarded the child with evident distaste.
  • Making use of the emotionally disturbed in this way has become a distasteful trend on the political left.
  • Everything about this story is unpleasant and distasteful. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'm a wee bit distasted that her between-climaxes wrapup is so similar to the final beach scene in "Contact". Spoiling Harry
  • Perhaps his distaste is not about the amount of metaphysical pondering now verse then, but rather its alignment with his personal metaphysics. A Trend?
  • Like all reality shows, it quickly turns its attention to the Jacuzzi, and here, at least one measure of equality is achieved: Gay men turn out to be just as distasteful and empty-headed as all the straight people on reality TV. Logo's 'A-List: New York' is a poor excuse for a social study
  • At first Wexford felt a curious distaste and then he thought about the dead man and what he knew of him.
  • The researchers focused on the insula, the region of the brain that usually responds when you see something distasteful. Times, Sunday Times
  • That my friend is the real issue of distastefulness. Kirk's Lies Changed The Course of the Media and our Country
  • In any case, aesthetic distastefulness should not be grounds for censorship. ali Said, They Had Me At ‘Scrotum’ | Her Bad Mother
  • There's something distasteful about this so-called bittersweet comedy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Like many Scots youngsters, she has developed a distaste for porridge and Brussel sprouts.
  • The shock of the new was superseded by a spiteful distaste for the prematurely aged.
  • I find this kind of coverage distasteful, pointless and irrelevant.
  • As for your question: your desire to punish people for engaging in behaviour you find distasteful is just as obnoxious as when anyone else does it. Coyote Blog » Blog Archive » What’s Next — Dreaming of Mussolini?
  • So, as distaste and apathy mar the health of the body politic, what remedies can be found? Times, Sunday Times
  • The word seemed to twist his face into a moue of distaste. ‘My job is to make fabulous people feel fabulous.’
  • It required much tact and skill to break the ranks of the chief forces arrayed against the scheme to revest the reserves in the Crown -- a scheme distasteful to Canadians generally, and subversive of the legislative independence of Upper Canada. The Story of My Life Being Reminiscences of Sixty Years' Public Service in Canada
  • The instant you enter the Thunderbird, you are overcome with an edacious distaste and a puncturing depression. Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas
  • The girl gritted her teeth distastefully and resisted the tempting urge to spit at the man.
  • Many of us choose to let our distaste for discussing money win out; we keep our feelings inside. Christianity Today
  • The distaste was tangible across his face and he shuddered perceptibly.
  • Many people know about my distaste for “creative” sushi – an overly muscular behemoth of rice bristling with decidedly non-Japanese sushi ingredients like steak, cream cheese, tomatoes, and jalapenos with names like Crunchy Cowboy, Godzilla, and Firecracker Fantasy that sound more appropriate for an aquarian battle of American Gladiators than a sushi menu. Asian Fusion is So Last Decade - Christina's Potato Salad
  • Most people's attitudes toward caterpillars are based on this sort of lowly image and range from distaste (for, say, large hornworms munching on tomatoes in the garden) to indifference (toward, say, buckeye larvae chomping on weeds).
  • Plato made it a great sign of an intemperate and corrupt commonwealth, where lawyers and physicians did abound; and the Romans distasted them so much that they were often banished out of their city, as Pliny and Celsus relate, for 600 years not admitted. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Even for those who work under the rubric of ‘political economy,’ the political has remained something of an afterthought except, perhaps, as a statement of personal distaste with current economic trends.
  • England had been, and revered him with such enthusiasm for what she called his magnificent manhood and beneficence, as was ready on the least encouragement to have become something a good deal warmer; but whatever she did served to make her distasteful to him. My Young Alcides
  • The bodybuilding lifestyle as portrayed by these publications is sordid and distasteful.
  • This is obviously a subject many will find distasteful; yet the way the subject is handled here is honest, moving, and entirely unsensational.
  • I said I'm interested in the big picture, and all that means is: I incorporate all the wild, wacky, distasteful and negative stuff into my ideas and conception about the internet.
  • However I did detect, to my distaste, a big wallop of condescension.
  • He was also showing a distaste for outdoor pursuits that ran against the grain of their family life.
  • The gallery, he noted, had put up a warning that some people might find the images distasteful. Times, Sunday Times
  • She regarded the child with evident distaste.
  • Popular shows with performing dolphins, sea lions and parrots, though some visitors may find the displays distasteful. Collins Traveller - Mallorca
  • The raunch smell caused his nose to scrunch up in distaste as he looked at his pet wolf.
  • David Hockney is outspoken, privileged by his irremovable status, in his distaste for an officialdom of art.
  • There is nothing more distasteful than backpackers landing in developing countries and pleading poverty.
  • Mother Earth would surely know it was his and would then castigate him in some way for having polluted her in such a distasteful manner. GYPSY MASALA
  • The fact that people find it distasteful doesn't mean you can criminalise it. Times, Sunday Times
  • In both, a small minority seeks tolerance of behaviour that causes in the majority anything from indifference through distaste to abhorrence.
  • Instead, we must be vigilant in guarding against the distasteful practice of having unfavourable preconceived notions against individuals based on their origin.
  • Dean Neuhaus had come here from London, and he managed to make our entire country inferior to his too—our grossly abundant restaurant meals, our bad-mannered children, our sloppy and distasteful use of the English language. The Six Rules of Maybe
  • He detects a rise in self delusion, a diminution of individual identity and a selling-out of the soul, and reveals a hardening distaste for falsehood and pretence in his darkly-amusing morality play.
  • He did not like the having to go and tell of a love affair so soon after he had declared his belief that no such thing existed; it was a confession of fallibility which is distasteful to most men. Wives and Daughters
  • There was also something rather distasteful in the way that the Home Secretary handled the issue. Times, Sunday Times
  • As much as anything, that often seemed to be the result of a distaste for bland British and American rock music.
  • Some of your ideas were foreshadowed in the 1930s by Ronald Fisher's writings on the distastefulness of some insects.
  • The idea that some of the questions we ask have answers in our past seems distasteful. Christianity Today
  • Back at the bar, Maxwell Cole was looking at his latte with all the distaste of a tree-hugger faced with a clear-cut. BREACH OF DUTY
  • Of course, he has views on social issues that, to a Western leftie, are (at best) distasteful.
  • I feel the same distaste this week as we see two striking examples of this kind of dishonesty. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has never in his life before done night work and has a strong distaste for it.
  • Lincoln’s distaste for war is evident throughout this portion, and his ‘pigeon-hearted’ nature is discussed in detail.
  • He had, when young for English public life, attained to high office; but -- partly from a great distaste to the drudgery of administration; partly from a pride of temperament, which unfitted him for the subordination that a Cabinet owes to its chief; partly, also, from a not uncommon kind of epicurean philosophy, at once joyous and cynical, which sought the pleasures of life and held very cheap its honours -- he had obstinately declined to re-enter office, and only spoke on rare occasions. Kenelm Chillingly — Volume 04
  • He also displayed a distaste or lack of appreciation for the scientific method.
  • In any case, aesthetic distastefulness should not be grounds for censorship. They Had Me At 'Scrotum'
  • There is a terrible distaste in France for that kind of showiness," says Poirier. Nicolas Sarkozy and Carla Bruni-Sarkozy: The long and the short of it
  • Yes, folding the tent on investments whose high hopes are dashed is mighty distasteful.
  • Is there some rebellious part of us that finds reality distasteful and restrictive? The Secrets of Musical Confidence
  • Vasari states that in his old age Piero expressed his distaste for the sordid trappings of death, such as parasitic nurses, the visitations of weeping relatives, and confinement in dark sickrooms.
  • However, I must confess that with age has come a certain distaste for the noise, the crowds and the whole hurly-burly of mass protest.
  • Anger fizzed up from deep within, like Alka Seltzer tablets dropped into the glass of water; noisy, bitter and distasteful. Writer Unboxed » Blog Archive » On your mark, get set…CONTEST!
  • Mother Earth would surely know it was his and would then castigate him in some way for having polluted her in such a distasteful manner. GYPSY MASALA
  • But it is not nearly as distasteful as the fact that four people have died at this accident black spot in four years.
  • His distaste for publicity of any sort is well known.
  • Popular shows with performing dolphins, sea lions and parrots, though some visitors may find the displays distasteful. Collins Traveller - Mallorca
  • You probably find the fact that there is a monetary value to your work rather distasteful.
  • But your personal distaste is not a legitimate basis for unjust laws. The Volokh Conspiracy » Criminal Charges Against Anti-Homosexuality Street Preacher Dropped in England
  • From 1942 Eden was Churchill's designated successor, but his distaste for party politics made him consider seriously Churchill's offer of the Indian viceroyalty.
  • Besides developing a distaste for dairy, many people also had nausea, vomiting, confusion, kidney problems, and even kidney failure — all signs of harmful levels of calcium in their blood (called hypercalcemia). Moderation in all things—including calcium supplements
  • I believe strongly in the distasteful effect of "kipple", the crap that tends to accumulate on a Web site as it ossifies. Archive 2009-03-01
  • I remember well that Hamish found the whole process distasteful and destructive.
  • Your distasteful language is almost as horrid as your appearance!
  • Eating meat is disagreeable to Thoreau's imagination, and his distaste of it is instinctual.
  • I agree with Lembit about the distastefulness of this sort of thing. Was Lembit Pushed?
  • He dragged his bags past us, and giving a distasteful look at me said, ‘Want some advice, bud?’
  • Many view nursing homes with the same distaste as prisons and vow to avoid them at all costs.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy