Definition of repugnancenext

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of repugnance Brianna seems to swing between two moods: intense enthusiasm, intense repugnance. Joyce Carol Oates, The New Yorker, 16 Mar. 2025 In fact, the retort could lead people to dangerously belittle the scourge and repugnance of real anti-Semitism. Salam Fayyad, Foreign Affairs, 20 June 2024 The series gets darker and more grotesque as the season progresses, and our uncomfortable laughter eventually fades into a grimace of repugnance. Kristen Baldwin, EW.com, 10 July 2023 Though historically dubious, Thirteentherism is rhetorically useful in mobilizing moral repugnance at chattel slavery to protest present-day prison conditions, as if current abuses aren’t sufficient cause for indignation. Sean Wilentz, The New York Review of Books, 1 Dec. 2022 News of Donald Trump’s recent soiree at Mar-a-Lago with Nicholas Fuentes, a man whose repugnance stands in inverse relationship to his intellectual capacity, reminds us that the former and perhaps future president’s ability to attain new levels of notoriety remains impressively undimmed. Gerard Baker, WSJ, 28 Nov. 2022 Police in the United States are not supposed to police ideology, and the repugnance of offensive speech, such as Nazi symbols or overtly racist rhetoric, is not relevant to whether it’s protected under the Constitution, said David Siegel, a professor at New England Law | Boston. Danny McDonald, BostonGlobe.com, 10 Aug. 2022 Some combination of awe and repugnance and confusion that she’s spent so many of her obviously prodigious talents spinning stories for men who need their stories spun. Monica Hesse, Washington Post, 27 Aug. 2020 The debate still rages, fuelled more by the wisdom of repugnance than by data. Ed Yong, Discover Magazine, 23 Feb. 2010
Recent Examples of Synonyms for repugnance
Noun
  • Repulsion, disgust, and ambivalence can all find rootedness in horror.
    Horace D. Ballard, Artforum, 22 Apr. 2026
  • Some also voiced their disgust during the protests in September.
    Roshane Thomas, New York Times, 21 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • In the centuries since colonists waged war against the crown, American’s attitudes toward the royals have shifted from hatred to adoration.
    Kathryn Palmer, USA Today, 29 Apr. 2026
  • But the War on Terror persisted and mutated into nightmares in Iraq and Afghanistan, and then Syria, which unleashed that darkness in the form of terrorist states and a refugee crisis that spread anti-Muslim and anti-migrant hatred to Europe, the United States, and beyond.
    Literary Hub, Literary Hub, 29 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • In 1988’s Moonwalk, co-edited by his friend Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Jackson acknowledged his distaste for revealing every detail about his life.
    Steve Knopper, Rolling Stone, 22 Apr. 2026
  • Vanderpump Rules was basically built on Schroeder’s distaste for Shay (and on the male cast’s constant infidelity).
    Bethy Squires, Vulture, 19 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • Who knows the horrors of the seas like HERMAN MELVILLE?
    Literary Hub, Literary Hub, 28 Apr. 2026
  • The psychological horror film, starring Armie Hammer, Dakota Johnson and Zazie Beetz, was distributed by Hulu in the United States and Netflix internationally.
    Brent Lang, Variety, 28 Apr. 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Repugnance.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/repugnance. Accessed 1 May. 2026.

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