[
US
/ˈɫɑθ/
]
[ UK /lˈɒθ/ ]
[ UK /lˈɒθ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
unwillingness to do something contrary to your custom
a reluctant smile
loath to admit a mistake -
(usually followed by `to') strongly opposed
clearly indisposed to grant their request
antipathetic to new ideas
loath to go on such short notice
averse to taking risks
How To Use loth In A Sentence
- He came back hours later clothes ragged, an excited look on his face.
- In many places, glittering among the clothes, were gold and silver coins, a few silver ornaments such as buckles, and watches -- things not missed by the pirates in the transport of their flight. The Frozen Pirate
- I lashed the clothes that I had been brought to wear at the hospital into the bag, a couple of ancient pairs of socks that felt suddenly found and familiar.
- His wife shopped him to me with a bitter complaint about his clothes bill.
- At the last minute I decided to go, so I flung a few clothes together and left.
- After a bit of a stickybeak at the Queen's Scottish residence of Holyroodhouse, we made the most of the remaining daylight walking the length of the Royal Mile through the Old Town back to the castle, stopping by the Heart of Midlothian. TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
- The market opened 100 booths selling South Korean clothes on 2,600 square meters of floor last August.
- Lee's debut on the Xbox does not resemble a dragon, but prefers to plod along like a sloth, short on all the crucial fronts, lazily bumbling along everywhere else.
- Her name means happiness, but she is a widow with five children who makes ends meet by washing clothes for the neighbourhood and preparing injera, the unleavened bread prepared today as it was 1000 years ago.
- Rose doubled over when Facer walked in wearing his funny clothes.