1. loathing - Noun
2. loathing - Verb
of Loathe
Extreme disgust; a feeling of aversion, nausea, abhorrence, or detestation.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAt first he worked briefly near his hometown of Pendleton as a security guard for Pinkerton Government Services at Calspan in Cheektowaga, where he spoke daily to his co-worker Carl Lebron, Jr. about his loathing for government. Source: Internet
He also shows More loathing Protestantism, burning both Martin Luther's books and English Protestants who have been convicted of heresy. Source: Internet
Free Lisl: Fear and Loathing in Denver (2006) chronicles Thompson's efforts in helping to free Lisl Auman, who was sentenced to life in prison without parole for the shooting of a police officer, a crime she didn't commit. Source: Internet
And yet, despite loathing “The Tyrant” for being such a dick, Stevie occasionally found himself resenting his mother even more; partly because she didn’t defend Aunt Mandy when Terry insulted her, but mostly because she let him detonate their lives. Source: Internet
Hough, p. 102. Even after the birth of her first child, she continued to socialise much as before, which led to some friction between the queen and the young couple, exacerbated by Alexandra's loathing of Prussians and the queen's partiality towards them. Source: Internet
A pandemic biologic virus awash in a caldron of equally lethal human viruses, explains fear and loathing as a state of being and a manipulative tool of conscious human power. Source: Internet