distaste - meaning and definition. What is distaste
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What (who) is distaste - definition


Distaste      
·noun Discomfort; uneasiness.
II. Distaste ·noun Alienation of affection; displeasure; anger.
III. Distaste ·vi To be distasteful; to taste ill or disagreeable.
IV. Distaste ·noun Aversion of the taste; dislike, as of food or drink; disrelish.
V. Distaste ·vt To deprive of taste or relish; to make unsavory or distasteful.
VI. Distaste ·vt To Offend; to Disgust; to Displease.
VII. Distaste ·vt Not to have relish or taste for; to Disrelish; to Loathe; to Dislike.
distaste      
n.
1.
Disrelish, disgust.
2.
Aversion, dislike, repugnance, displeasure, dissatisfaction.
distaste      
¦ noun mild dislike or aversion.
Origin
C16: from dis- + taste, on the pattern of early mod. Fr. desgout, Ital. disgusto; cf. disgust.
Pronunciation examples for distaste
1. with an equal distaste
ted-talks_558_LizColeman_2009-320k
2. that taste is about distaste.
The Language of Food _ Dan Jurafsky _ Talks at Google
3. Who have a distaste for superpac spending?
The Price of Inequality _ Joseph Stiglitz _ Talks at Google
4. with many arguing that the public's distaste
_ Kat Jungnickel _ Talks at Google
5. What was the anatomy of my distaste?
ted-talks_1907_LukeSyson_2013X-320k
Examples of use of distaste
1. On the other hand, it might be plain untrammelled distaste.
2. Since when has "distaste" become a cause for suspicion?
3. Labor old–timers bunched up their nose in distaste.
4. Then there‘s the LDP‘s distaste for a damaging internal battle.
5. The English distaste for political ideas extends into our literature.