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Definition of distaste noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

distaste

noun
 
/dɪsˈteɪst/
 
/dɪsˈteɪst/
[uncountable, singular]
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  1. a feeling that somebody/something is unpleasant or offensive
    • in/with distaste He looked around the filthy room in distaste.
    • distaste (for somebody/something) a distaste for politics of any sort
    • distaste at (doing) something She couldn't hide her distaste at having to sleep in such squalid conditions.
    Extra Examples
    • She wrinkled her nose in mock distaste.
    • He regarded the child with evident distaste.
    • Jim looked with distaste at the cockroach in his soup.
    • They are country people with a general distaste for all things urban.
    • He couldn't hide the deep distaste that he felt for many of their customs.
    • She felt a distaste for anything to do with bodily functions.
    • Joe had a profound distaste for violence.
    • She was trying not to show her distaste.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • deep
    • extreme
    • great
    verb + distaste
    • feel
    • have
    • express
    preposition
    • in distaste
    • with distaste
    • distaste  at
    phrases
    • an expression of distaste
    • a look of distaste
    See full entry
    Word Originlate 16th cent.: from dis- (expressing reversal) + taste, on the pattern of early modern French desgout, Italian disgusto. Compare with disgust.
See distaste in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee distaste in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
trait
noun
 
 
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