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4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
dis·gust
/dɪˈskʌst, dɪsˈgʌst ||dɪz-/
U厭惡,噁心(vt.)使厭惡,使噁心(vi.)令人厭惡
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Dis·gust
,
n.
Repugnance
to
what
is
offensive
;
aversion
or
displeasure
produced
by
something
loathsome
;
loathing
;
strong
distaste
; --
said
primarily
of
the
sickening
opposition
felt
for
anything
which
offends
the
physical
organs
of
taste
;
now
rather
of
the
analogous
repugnance
excited
by
anything
extremely
unpleasant
to
the
moral
taste
or
higher
sensibilities
of
our
nature
;
as
,
an
act
of
cruelty
may
excite
disgust
.
The
manner
of
doing
is
more
consequence
than
the
thing
done
,
and
upon
that
depends
the
satisfaction
or
disgust
wherewith
it
is
received
.
--
Locke
.
In
a
vulgar
hack
writer
such
oddities
would
have
excited
only
disgust
.
--
Macaulay
.
Syn:
--
Nausea
;
loathing
;
aversion
;
distaste
;
dislike
;
disinclination
;
abomination
.
See
Dislike
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Dis·gust
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Disgusted
;
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Disgusting
.]
To
provoke
disgust
or
strong
distaste
in
;
to
cause
(
any
one
)
loathing
,
as
of
the
stomach
;
to
excite
aversion
in
;
to
offend
the
moral
taste
of
; --
often
with
at
,
with
,
or
by
.
To
disgust
him
with
the
world
and
its
vanities
.
--
Prescott
.
Ærius
is
expressly
declared
. . .
to
have
been
disgusted
at
failing
.
--
J
.
H
.
Newman
.
Alarmed
and
disgusted
by
the
proceedings
of
the
convention
.
--
Macaulay
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
disgust
n
:
strong
feelings
of
dislike
v
1:
fill
with
distaste
; "
This
spoilt
food
disgusts
me
" [
syn
:
gross
out
,
revolt
,
repel
]
2:
cause
aversion
in
;
offend
the
moral
sense
of
; "
The
pornographic
pictures
sickened
us
" [
syn
:
revolt
,
nauseate
,
sicken
,
churn up
]
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