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"detest" Definitions
  1. to hate somebody/something very much

352 Sentences With "detest"

How to use detest in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "detest" and check conjugation/comparative form for "detest". Mastering all the usages of "detest" from sentence examples published by news publications.

They detest your values, they detest what you stand for and that&aposs what Trump speaks to the American people.
The former KLA warlords are known to detest one another.
They detest warnings with repulsive images of decaying body parts.
Partners who exhilarated me, but who I could equally detest.
"We detest the idea of the 'instant house,'" Highsmith says.
If you detest being in traffic, leave for appointments earlier.
"I detest discrimination in any form, against any group," Rep.
Galileo was subsequently required to "abjure, curse and detest" his beliefs.
The app, which launched in February, asks users what they detest.
Or they could embrace what they so recently claimed to detest.
They detest Al Jazeera, Qatar's rambunctious and highly influential satellite network.
He vowed that he would "abjure, curse and detest" his findings.
But there are also a lot of Democrats who detest him.
He vowed that he would "abjure, curse, and detest" his findings.
Republican voters overwhelmingly stand with him; Democrats almost universally detest him.
Firms and voters detest fake news, insincere excuses and thoughtless comments.
"I hate and detest these 30-second, ugly negative ads," he said.
It's not the engineering team's fault that you discovered you detest coding.
But certainly, it does indicate how much people detest such potential action.
Good luck then, because people will hate and detest the real you.
This kind of unfettered movement is exactly what many Leave voters detest.
I also reevaluated what I love and absolutely detest, like anything polyester.
Postmodern youths detest authority structures, especially those related to grammar and punctuation.
If there is one thing I truly detest in life, it's fluorescent lights.
Though the two groups detest each other, they share methods, morals and mindsets.
Instead, thanks to Trump's efforts, Republican voters have demonstrated they detest this idea.
Communities which rely on irrigation detest the plan because it threatens their livelihood.
"I detest those small-size boobs," he said after a disappointing three months.
They detest riesling, they say, because they think the wines are all sweet.
Millions of people have spent their entire lives ruled by leaders they detest.
How odd that they have again become what they claim to detest about Trump.
But eastern European governments detest the idea of formal consignment to a second class.
" —Leah, 29 "I detest when a guy assumes he's much, much smarter than me.
Appeals to make prisons more humane often fall on deaf ears; voters detest criminals.
Whether you love or detest sparkling water, we can all agree that's pretty great.
They detest IS-K as much or more than they despise the Afghan government.
And the Apatow girls' detest for their famous father's comedy extends to his fans.
Sheffield had, in short, every imaginable reason to detest the so-called Iron Lady.
Banks themselves detest negative rates, which reduce the amount they can earn from interest.
Some detest Cruz the politician because of his grandstanding, but most dislike Cruz the person.
But just because you detest running doesn't mean you should write off cardio workouts altogether.
The vast majority also said they detest mobile ads even more than those on desktop.
Detest is a little too severe, but I would say I'm not a brunch person.
That was odd, because the chatbot has all the qualities I generally detest in people.
So it should come as no surprise that I also detest thriller and horror movies.
Passengers detest Uber's surge pricing, but it transparently reinforces an economic lesson: Financial incentives matter.
It's a great tool for home cooks, but especially for people who detest runny eggs.
I know I'm a figure of fun and that some detest me for imagined pretensions.
Many of the military and intelligence officers who have served under him simply detest him.
In a democracy, not voting is voting -- for all that you may detest and oppose.
"I think that any claim of white supremacy is wrong and I detest it," Sen.
Not only will you look unprofessional, but your coworkers may just come to detest you.
Impeaching Trump has been met with apprehension among voters, including those who detest the president.
Afghanistan attack The American University in Kabul is exactly the kind of place the Taliban detest.
While the guards of Grace's prison detest her, these members of high society want her pardoned.
Many of Tropodo's residents say they detest the plastic burning but are powerless to stop it.
I detest who I see in the mirror, and the words I type on my computer.
"Senator, of course the violence in the schools is something we all detest," the judge replied.
Those who detest the dish might compare it to smelly socks or even to rotting garbage.
The presidents of Venezuela and Nicaragua, who detest Mr. Trump, will be delivering General Assembly speeches.
Place turbines in the sea and you also dodge the NIMBYs who detest them on land.
"I detest that type of politics, and I think most Americans do," the Vermont independent said.
Impeachment is and always has been about satisfying the demands of Democratic voters who detest Trump.
Warren argues that voters of all stripes detest what she characterizes as a fundamentally corrupt system.
If you descend to hatred you'll turn yourself into a mirror image of what you detest.
Liberal and progressive voters detest Pence's stands on the issues, and conservatives question his commitment and competency.
He says this is not just a matter of principle, but also because voters detest a phoney.
Most will not, because they are cash-strapped and generally detest any change to business as usual.
Hard as it is to believe, many Democrats loathed Bush as much as they now detest Trump.
Now the rest of the country can detest them as well and look forward to Election Day.
In 14 words: Trump is on record as having supported a wide array of policies conservatives detest.
Recently, I was out with a couple of girlfriends who remarked that they too detest morning sex.
Ten of the Red Sox' 12 runs have come with two outs, and their hitters detest strikeouts.
Most of the people who detest Trump don't know anybody who works with him or supports him.
Rather, voters who detest Mr Johnson seem more inclined to jump to Mr Corbyn, and vice versa.
I've recently started snoring (something I detest in other people when they sleep) and it's been disturbing him.
Another problem is that many locals see health workers as an arm of the government, which they detest.
The first is his own hardliners, who detest the nuclear deal and have been pressing him to act.
It's tolerance to a level of compulsive petting most cats detest might make it viable for relieving anxiety.
Because again I just detest when old people make these complaints about shit but don't offer any solutions.
I hate to shop, I'm positively insensitive, I detest Barbra Streisand, and, for God's sake, I'm a Republican!
He is speaking to people who disbelieve conventional politicians, who detest a Washington they think has betrayed them.
The fact that he and Luke Rockhold seem to genuinely detest each other will only help the situation.
If you already detest Dr. Phil, they will shore up your conviction that he is indeed worth detesting.
This realization sent shudders through the Republican establishment, many of whom detest Trump and Cruz with equal measure.
Business groups and financial firms detest the rule and challenged it in court soon after it was promulgated.
Employers and labor unions detest the tax and would have nearly a decade to try to kill it.
Even if Chinese leaders came to detest Mr. Li's constant criticisms, they discreetly paid their respects on Wednesday.
And you know, I'm never intrusive of spaces that aren't mine but people really detest the photographer nowadays.
On its website, the organization said Germans 'detest' both genetically modified seeds and the weed-killer that Monsanto produces.
" Kavanaugh allowed that "the violence in the schools is something we all detest and want to do something about.
That some people detest tattletales and that the leaked conversation does not sound explosive are points in your favor.
Philosophically you can embrace or detest this shift, but one thing is indisputable: It has been a legislative disaster.
Guide to Games is Waypoint's weekly short video series diving into a game we love, detest, or find fascinating.
When I saw the falcons engulfed in smoke, I was set to detest the piece for exploiting the exotic.
We've come to a remarkably mature place as a society where you can detest the war, but not the warrior.
Lucy Hutton and Joshua Templeman are true work nemeses — they aren't simply annoyed by each other; they detest each other.
Before too long Rubio will realize his first task is to rally the voters who detest or fear those men.
"Of course the violence in the schools is something we all detest and want to do something about," Kavanaugh said.
That's a plus for me, because one thing I personally detest is when stuff sticks to me in hot weather.
To top it all off, the people of Wisconsin, who are holding a primary on Tuesday, appear to detest him.
Some Republican grandees who detest Mr Cruz even more than they despise Mr Trump have fallen in behind the billionaire.
The bottom line: Republicans will detest this map because it tips several districts that had favored Republican toward the Democrats.
Both states face a common threat from IS, but they detest each other too much to join forces against it.
The only thing that Americans detest more than an expensive drug is a bureaucrat who says they can't have it.
Whatever harm is done by the organizations you detest, an extra $1,000 isn't going to increase it more than negligibly.
"I detest that, because you can protest things that happen in this country; you have every right to," he said.
But while I'm definitely into Jennifer Connelly, I'm neutral on Ashley Greene and detest Bradley Cooper and his dorky grin.
I detest confrontation and owning up to my mistakes more than anyone, but I knew I had to be brave.
There's a certain sort of elite liberal who loves Republican men almost as much as they detest anti-establishment progressives.
Even some who claim to detest the ravages of mass incarceration argue that Mr. Madoff should be denied compassionate release.
If you detest formal gatherings, don't order eight place settings of fine china or a full set of wine glasses.
If you detest formal gatherings, don't order eight place settings of fine china or a full set of wine glasses.
The issue is obscure compared with other national concerns this campaign season, but doctrinaire conservatives detest eminent domain as government overreach.
Woodley may detest dating in real life, but her Big Little Lies character could find herself involved in a new romance.
It was no secret that the suspicious, earthy president and the polished, aloof Mr Wickremesinghe had grown to detest each other.
Germans in particular will chafe at devoting more money to a cause they dislike to please a foreign president they detest.
Yelling about Chief Wahoo mostly serves to make those who detest Wahoo feel good, and those who love Wahoo feel justified.
But to many of these Americans, Clinton is far from the solution they seek — and actually personifies the problem they detest.
I disagree with Donald Trump's politics and I detest his bullying approach, his lack of intellect and his lack of morals.
He has proposed a four-pillar overhaul of American immigration policy that most Democrats and Latinos in the United States detest.
Show some ultimate care for their destiny and soul even if you detest the words that come out of their mouths.
" Kavanaugh will not be in the hearing room Friday but has testified that violence in schools is something we all "detest.
"As a martial law victim and survivor, I detest his martial law threat," Ms. Rosales said, referring to Mr. Duterte's warning.
Bodega became the latest symbol of everything that people have come to detest about Silicon Valley and its breathless innovation-worship culture.
A person you have mixed feelings about is much more interesting and confusing than a person you outright detest, and therefore, dismiss.
Rural Americans detest the socially liberal values that urban compatriots foist upon them by supposedly manipulating the machinery in Washington (see article).
Make no mistake: I detest what people like Mateen do -- the mere thought of that man this week, for example, nauseates me.
English-speakers could also detest "moist" because pronouncing it requires us contract certain zygomatic muscles that correspond to facial expressions of disgust.
Young voters and many conservatives especially feel forced to choose between a Republican that they detest and a Democrat that they distrust.
Both of these women fit into the same narrow standard of beauty that supports the culture of photoshopping Kendrick claims to detest.
But even if you detest the bus as public transit, you probably won't be on board a bus longer than two hours.
Trans people can experience dysphoria about more than just their faces; they can detest their shoulders, or their arms, or their genitals.
Importance of personalities "People come to love or detest a person much more readily than they do an idea," the manual states.
"I detest his social views but he has the right opinions on where we should go with Brexit," said one Conservative member.
He was called "Whitey" because of his light blond hair but was said to detest the nickname and preferred being called Jimmy.
Democratic voters detest Mr. Trump just as much as Republicans disliked Barack Obama, but they have different ways of expressing their opposition.
" Kavanaugh allowed, in defending himself, that "the violence in the schools is something we all detest and want to do something about.
The price we've paid for this non-corruption is the gridlock, stubborn, my-way-or-the-highway politics we've all come to detest.
It was a controversial move by editor-in-chief Anna Wintour, who was friends with West but was rumored to detest Kim Kardashian.
Highly indebted Italians detest limits, fearing the loss of a steady source of demand for their debt and a rise in borrowing costs.
While users can't hear their own voice, since people often detest doing so, while you can't save messages that are received from others.
They detest the Dodd-Frank Act, which regulates banks, and lament the rulemaking of the Department of Labour and the Environmental Protection Agency.
But their prediction is based in large part on the idea that a president they detest will indeed get to enact his agenda.
Now, a new dating app called Hater can help you find better matches by focusing on those things you and others mutually detest.
The college admissions scandal should not serve as another reason to detest the ultra-wealthy, but rather as a platform for education reform.
So they get most of their information about Trumpism from others who also detest Trumpism, which is always a recipe for epistemic closure.
The violent counter protestors do not get a free pass for using violence simply because they oppose what any reasonable person would detest.
Even people who are tremendously vulnerable themselves, like Crystal Minton, support Trump because of his capacity to inflict pain on others they detest.
Investors detest firms with "related-party transactions", in which executives receive money from customers, the firm or counterparties on top of their compensation package.
There are several reasons why executives at industrial firms have a soft spot for unwieldy structures, despite the fact that shareholders usually detest them.
There are loads of tweets from people who also detest the holiday on which a nonzero number of people will receive a Doritos bouquet.
Just as disturbingly, there are no lone wolves in Trump's formulation—terrorists are, in his view, incubated in Muslim communities that detest our values.
Poles detest this phrase, since it inaccurately suggests that Poles, not Germans, ran concentration camps such as Auschwitz-Birkenau and Treblinka on Polish soil.
Ms. Harris argues that her proposal would serve to "modernize the school schedule," but it's chained to work norms that many Americans already detest.
He emailed the Washington Post saying, "they got it wrong, they detest us and they will do anything to try and undermine our credibility."
We've heard for years that lawmakers detest spending so much time raising money for their political campaigns; they'd rather be working for their constituents.
" During one debate, recorded at the University of Toronto, he said, "I am not going to be a mouthpiece for language that I detest.
Small numbers to be sure, but since almost all Republicans like the president and almost all Democrats detest him, it is a real loss.
The production has the right amount of bounce for even those who detest being in the club to find themselves oscillating to its rhythm.
His coalition partners may detest him, but for now they see greater political advantage in a wounded prime minister than in a fresh one.
But also, I can tell you all about the 64th row of a China Airlines plane, and how I detest — and protest — resort fees.
Now, Musk's company may be poised to return the industry to another era of stagnation, something that both sides of the aisle should detest.
Democrats have delayed his confirmation, and that in turn has delayed Republican efforts to devise an alternative to the health care law they detest.
Thus, "Where Am I Going?" has the feeling of spending time with very smart people who both enjoy and detest each other all at once.
Customers particularly detest typing in credit card numbers on their phones, especially if asked to do so in public—while riding a busy bus, say.
No matter how much they detest the regime in Pyongyang, South Koreans still consider North Koreans their brethren and want to avoid another internecine war.
And if Trump turns his back on these policies and becomes like the Establishment GOP that his own voters detest, he will lose his base.
Am I a Renn-head, or am I what Renner described in his app-shuttering note as "everything I detest and can't and won't condone"?
Now, in the case of my family, we may get angry but only in trying to make a point of how much we all detest Trump.
Their calculation, undoubtedly, is that the Democrats who will turn out to vote in the 2020 primaries detest not only the president but his immigration policies.
Granted, I detest the fingerprint magnet that is the glossy glass back of this phone, but that's another quality that it shares with super premium devices.
Mr Kaczynski has chosen to stay in the shadows, perhaps to avoid inflaming the large segment of Polish voters who detest his brand of nationalist populism.
I didn't like children, and I detest dolls — I mean, I really hate them, especially the ones whose eyes roll shut when you tilt them backward.
On one hand, people have appropriated this footwear (In New Zealand, they are called Jandals, as in Japanese sandals.) and on the other, we detest them.
That party will begin to attract disaffected Sanders people who detest the Trans-Pacific Partnership and possibly some minority voters highly suspicious of the political elite.
Many Sunnis welcomed the group, but now most of the civilians who have fled lands the militants control say they came to detest the group's brutality.
Many solvers enjoy cross-references in their puzzles, but I know that many others detest them with some sort of burning passion I can't relate to.
By contrast, MAGA Republicans — whether of the fully or merely semi-Trumpified varieties — detest NeverTrumpers with an animus they can scarcely extend to liberals or progressives.
But the Yankees quickly showed him why so many visiting pitchers detest Yankee Stadium — and he wasn't even victimized by the short porch in right field.
Q: I detest travel irons and the act of ironing but I have a job that requires 80-percent travel to diverse capitals throughout the world.
"I am not going to be a mouthpiece for language that I detest, and that's that," he said during a debate at the University of Toronto.
"What was supposed to be a place for fans to connect with each other has turned into a place that is everything I detest," he wrote.
They solicited donations tied to how long the rally lasted, with the funds going to programs Klan members would detest, such community projects organized to oppose hatred.
One important detail is that they don't come with Samsung's pre-installed software, which can be a pretty big deal, depending on how much you detest bloatware.
"I detest the narrative that has been portrayed in the media, 'man whose girlfriend has been gunned down runs against and beats NRA-backed candidate,'" said Hurst.
Those who reject her simply because she is a Clinton, and because they detest the Clinton machine, are not paying attention to the turpitude of the alternative.
So is this just your way of affirming that you love Trump, detest the media and just wish some of these outlets could be made to disappear?
"The more I read, the more I was led to abhor and detest my enslavers," Douglass wrote, in a line that the creature himself might have written.
West Virginia illustrates the danger that accompanies the Clinton strategy of closely aligning with President Obama and his policies: Many white voters, particularly white men, detest him.
After World War II, then, the French emphasized the desirability of a planned economy and came to detest laissez-faire liberalism (or as they termed it, "ultraliberalism").
As much as we all detest bees, they're a vital part of our ecosystem and their extinction will cause much more than an end their natural sweetener.
" Or as Steve Duprey, a longtime fixture of the state G.O.P., put it, "Corey is the original lightning rod — some people love him, some people detest him.
"Any member of Congress who votes in support of impeachment ... is showing how deeply they revile and how truly they detest America&aposs Constitutional order," he wrote.
Evicted from the White House and in the minority in both House and Senate, they have no legislative levers with which to thwart a president they detest.
The counter-reaction is that voters who detest these actions rise in large numbers with righteous indignation to vote against them with great enthusiasm on Election Day.
And whether people relate in that or detest that, or whether they get that or don't get that, I'm just really trying to be true to me.
In particular, the House Intelligence Committee's investigation of Russian interference stands out as an example of precisely the kind of partisan gamesmanship that Rood and Bean detest.
WP Theater and Colt Coeur present Rehana Lew Mirza's play about a literature professor (Kavi Ladnier) and the novelist (Sendhil Ramamurthy) she may or may not detest.
I absolutely detest when this happens – I think we need work-life balance and to take time to enjoy our lunch hours, but today it just ain't happenin'.
Being an outsider at a moment people detest "The System": This is one way in which Trump can use his inexperience and distance from Washington to his advantage.
And he has worked aggressively to paint journalists as not only biased and "fake" but also as a stand-in for the so-called "elites" Trump supporters detest.
A lot of audiophiles detest noise-cancelling headphones because they tend to hamper sound quality, but the Cowin E7 Pros deliver real-time audio calibration to preserve clarity.
"I detest white supremacy and will fight it with every weapon in my hands," he wrote to a senior prison official in 1976, in another letter of grievance.
They say that they may vote for Mr. Moore next week in anger at what they perceive as sleazy smears against him coming from distant politicians they detest.
Even if your father plans to vote for a presidential nominee you detest, his reasoning is unlikely to open your eyes to a new perspective on contemporary politics.
All detest a goods-and-services tax of 6% introduced in 2015; the opposition has offered to scrap it in favour of a less efficient sales-and-services tax.
"I'm associated with the very thing I detest: vapid, vacuous, plastic, constructed, mindless celebrity," he said in the doc, which was reportedly filmed during the end of his marriage.
In fact, Comey's action has predictably turned the administration of justice into a political circus and fomented the kind of banana republic politics that Americans have come to detest.
Twenty-seven pages in, almost out of nowhere, he erupts into a shocking anti-Semitic tirade that all but capsizes the narrative: "I detest them, those Jews!" he rages.
One of the things that his supporters like is the very thing that others detest: His unapologetic, unabashed crusade to fight off all efforts at racial and ethnic inclusion.
For many who detest Donald Trump, the spectacle of the country's former leaders championing embattled American principles — principles once shared by even the bitterest political enemies — was fiercely moving.
For now, Democratic voters might think twice about embracing a candidate whose dark, distorting ideas about America bear such an uncomfortable resemblance to those of the president they detest.
In one swift move he picked off the mint leaf that topped the now-forgotten sweet, tossed it to the middle of the table and declared: ''I detest this!
I detest what Mitch McConnell and the Tea Party movement have put our nation through, prioritizing their need for our president to fail over the good of our country.
The Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, has cultivated a classic national leader's relationship with Trump based on mutual and national interest: Both men detest Iran's apparent regional ambitions.
Soderbergh was invigorated to push current models of storytelling and to explore a show with a "branching narrative" (they detest the phrase "choose your own adventure") for viewers to explore.
His country has become a haven for Arab dissidents, particularly exiled members of the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist group which the Saudis dislike and their Emirati allies detest (see article).
It doesn't matter if I detest everything that Trump stands for, we cannot allow ourselves to slip into the trap of brandishing his fatness as a symbol of his hatefulness.
On the other side, Cruz backers say that the first-term senator should stick to his guns and withhold an endorsement -- or risk angering his own supporters who detest Trump.
The Founding Father of our country would detest the actions of the man who now sits in the White House, for reasons so obvious they need not be listed. Sen.
And how could it have gone so wrong that he described it, in his final post there, as "a place that is everything I detest and can't or won't condone"?
Her name is Nikki Haley, and her time in Trump's service, as our ambassador to the United Nations, has only elevated her standing among Republicans — even those who detest him.
I detest Donald Trump and the damage he is doing to all of us, and it does my heart immeasurable good to see him and his minions pilloried without mercy.
Trump-era Republicans have accepted depravity and vitriol as the price they're willing to pay to have a person willing to fight the people and institutions they distrust and detest.
His question threw into sharp relief my predicament: As a liberal Russian living in the United States, I am now associated with a man whose xenophobic, antidemocratic agenda I detest.
Both are throw-you-in-at-the-deep-end experiences where you are forced to bond with people of a similar age and attitude who you either love or detest.
While we detest the sentiment of such sites, we support a free and open Internet and, similar to the principles of free speech, that sometimes means allowing such tasteless, ignorant content.
Operating under this mantra for two decades made Kobe an international icon and one of the most widely beloved basketball players ever, at least among the people that didn't detest him.
It also has the added benefit of making the Democrats whom Republican voters detest seem beholden to Trump, while doubling as a self-compliment to his ability to conduct bipartisan business.
His decision is likely to please those among his political base who detest the Obamacare system, which many Republicans have attacked for years as an unneeded government intrusion in Americans' healthcare.
She thinks it will allow them to spend more time building arguments around case law rather than hunting for it, a part of the job that many lawyers "detest," she said.
" He continued, "What was supposed to be a place for fans to connect with each other has turned into a place that is everything I detest and can't or won't condone.
Democrats, who detest his staunchly conservative views particularly on immigration policy, are eager to keep him in the post, while Trump and his GOP allies are actively trying to undercut him.
How did the party that has recently been led by country-club candidates like Mitt Romney and Bob Dole come to be overtaken by a performance artist whom these former nominees detest?
Five U.S. Supreme Court justices reminded the country on June 85033 that groups like the Freedom Foundation not only detest labor unions; they want them to be a thing of the past.
Mr. Nelson, 76, who was first elected to state office in the Nixon landslide of 1972, personifies the old-fashioned, risk-averse centrist Democrat that so many of today's young progressives detest.
Not content to bank only on the Cuban community in Florida, Mr. Trump is also courting the state's many Venezuelan immigrants, who justifiably detest the government of President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas.
"What was supposed to be a place for fans to connect with each other has turned into a place that is everything I detest and can't or won't condone," Renner went on.
Some Democrats are irritated by Clinton's remarks, noting that there is no evidence that Gabbard is a Russian asset and accusing the party's 2016 presidential nominee of elevating a candidate they detest.
Depending on the type of person you are — maybe you detest debt or like to tackle one big task at a time — it might feel better to pay down your loans first.
Some find email burdensome and prefer a call (or text); others evidently detest the phone, keeping a fastidious inbox even as they can't be bothered to listen to a voice mail message.
We'll look at all the traits a villain is supposed to excel at, including those we detest, and boil it down into one single score on what we are calling the Neganometer™.
We'll look at all the traits a villain is supposed to excel at — including those we detest — and boil it down into one single score on what we are calling the Neganometer™.
But they detest crime more, so politicians should not be afraid to embrace proven ways to make prison less of a school of crime and more of a path back to productive citizenship.
"Even if you detest your boss, what you want to do in this conversation is find something that allows you to express appreciation for what that manager has done for you," Kohut said.
It's been 28 years since Carter Cooper's death by suicide at age 23, but brother Anderson Cooper and mom Gloria Vanderbilt say they have still not achieved closure – and actually detest that word.
His character Sushil is not the most likeable character even at the beginning of the film, and by the time it ends, you are sure to detest his cat-got-the-cream expression.
I detest the anti-Semitism of T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Roald Dahl, Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Louis-Ferdinand Céline, but I may choose to read them because they happen to be great writers.
Not only is your stepmom's car seat safe from your mess, but also I detest cliché, and thus I order her: Don't make your stepdaughter sit with the dog and also starve her!
"While we detest the sentiment of such sites, we support a free and open internet and, similar to the principles of free speech, that sometimes means allowing such tasteless, ignorant content," he said.
He seems a "different person", says Ms Li. After several visits she discovered that the home's methods had been imported from Japan, a former wartime foe that older Chinese are commonly thought to detest.
"While I detest the killing of those officers and the taking of innocent lives, I did, in a way, I understood what could drive the shooter to do something like that," James told Harlow.
Those who detest Clinton have so overstated her failings that they are unable to see her as anything other than a kind of colossus that moves in a staticky cloud of ever-present suspicion.
Though he remains largely out of the public eye—and is said to detest the Washington social scene—he is deeply tied in to right-wing circles and even officiated Rush Limbaugh's third wedding.
"I detest musicals, but I was in town on business, and had the opportunity to get some tickets, and heard it's such a great play that I couldn't miss it," he said on Monday.
"Queen Elizabeth's decision to 'go faux' is the perfect reflection of the mood of the British public, the vast majority of whom detest cruel fur, and want nothing to do with it," Bass wrote.
If Clinton is elected, maybe even she can remind us that we've all developed these bad habits, that most of us secretly detest the game we're in and the way we are playing it.
There's something comforting about the warm feeling in your lungs right after you hit a J. Unlike spliffs, which people who don't smoke cigarettes tend to detest, you can share a joint with whomstever.
We'll look at all the traits a villain is supposed to excel at, including those we detest, and boil it down into one single score on what we are calling the Negan-o-meter™.
We'll look at all the traits a villain is supposed to excel at — including those we detest — and boil it down into one single score on what we are calling the Negan-o-meter™.
While there are many voters who so detest Trump that they will vote for any Democratic candidate, millions more Americans want to know what candidates stand for — not just who and what they stand against.
Had Mr. Trump's vision of a free-fall bankruptcy been implemented, a result would have been a dramatically shrunken American auto industry and even more of those job-killing imports that he claims to detest.
U.S. partners among the Syrian opposition generally ignore the Golan issue, but even those who detest Bashar al-Assad might feel forced to pledge fealty to the goal of recovering Syrian territory lost to Israel.
In giving him a victory on Judge Kavanaugh, she has emboldened Mr. Trump to continue down the very path she claims to detest: denigrating women, bullying opponents, choosing the most combative approach to every disagreement.
That was anathema to hard-line Brexiteers, and also to Northern Irish unionist lawmakers who care deeply about the bond between Britain and Northern Ireland and detest any divergences in trading rules between the two.
" That's real, worldly wisdom, which stands in stark contrast to Bruckner's Polonius-like banalities about how wisdom "urges us to refuse to adore or to detest the base metal, and instead to calmly enjoy it.
It revealed the Hunter Biden arrangement with Burisma, exactly the type of deal that Americans so detest yet have come to expect from Washington insiders and their families shamelessly cashing in on all their influence.
Mike Simpson (R-Idaho), chairman of the House Appropriations energy and water subcommittee, was doubtful Republicans will find an agreement on spending among themselves, resulting in a yearlong continuing resolution (CR), something defense hawks detest.
As Vox's Brian Resnick has reported, people who are better at self-control have likely learned better habits and even enjoy the things — such as exercise, or eating lots of fruits and vegetables — others detest.
The North American trade deal his administration just negotiated—the United States-­Mexico-Canada Agreement, aka Nafta 2.0—features a good example of a populist policy realized through an instrument of governance these populists now detest.
But for me, in this moment, it's important to first find a way of accepting that we can both protest state violence and detest community violence — and not let either discussion deprive the other of oxygen.
"It is true the British detest the dour bureaucrats sitting in Brussels, ruling over the E.U., but that is nothing compared to the widespread anger back then against the white man in India," Mr. Baru said.
"I am not going to be a mouthpiece for language I detest," Peterson told the audience, in response to a comparison made by the professors between racial hate speech and failing to respect someone's gender identity.
But investors typically detest such uncertainty and responded this week by offloading the Pakistani rupee, which hit a historic low, while hammering the stock market with a sell-off, wiping $19983 billion off the index's value.
These Republicans have made the craven choice to stand with Trump as long as he delivers the policies they like on tax cuts, gun control, fossil fuels, abortion and immigration, even though many privately detest him.
Any member of Congress who votes in support of impeachment—against every shred of truth, fact, evidence, and legal principle—is showing how deeply they revile the voters and how truly they detest America'ss Constitutional order.
Many Utah residents still detest the law, but the activity here, and in other politically conservative states, highlights the challenges Republicans and the White House face as they struggle to come up with a palatable replacement.
"For months, my campaign has survived the lies and dirty tricks from my opponents who profess to detest the games of the political class, but in reality are masters of it," he said in a statement.
This email probe news provides a lot of Americans very uneasy about voting for Trump, and saying so publicly, the perfect "surprise" excuse for voting for a guy so many of their friends and family personally detest.
We'll look at all the traits a villain is supposed to exemplify and excel at, including those we detest, and boil it down into one single score on what we are calling the Negan-o-meter™.
But both sides face a common challenge: Neither the marchers nor the president they detest have articulated a coherent set of mechanisms to translate their passionate rhetoric into concrete initiatives, programs, or policies that actually empower citizens.
It's hard for him to say exactly what initially animated people, but the candidate believes that being considered a dark horse early in the contest, especially when so many voters detest "politics as usual," was a blessing.
Going stoned was a no-brainer, so I woke up early, shared a bowl with my girlfriend, and hopped on the subway, unaware that I would soon develop an intimate relationship with the animal I most detest: ants.
"What was supposed to be a place for fans to connect with each other has turned into a place that is everything I detest and can't or won't condone," he wrote in a "Goodbye …" post on the app.
"I did a lot of research the past couple of months because I never believed the false narrative about it being any kind of racist symbol because no one names their school after that they detest," Ferron said.
Yet many in Washington and various media outlets seem ready to blame Mr. Kim's latest move on an American president they detest rather than on the time-honored North Korean playbook from which it is so obviously drawn.
With the majority of Americans, even many who detest him, giving President Trump high marks for his handling of the country's financial affairs, Biden will struggle to convince voters that they want to go back to the Obama era.
They may detest Clinton, and they may be tempted to express their displeasure by staying home, or by opting for some third-tier candidate like Jill Stein or Gary Johnson or—for the true protest-vote connoisseur—Evan McMullin.
That law requires truck drivers to drive no more than 11 hours in a 14-hour period — and the unprecedented lifting of that for certain loads was hailed as a win by drivers, many of whom detest the law.
"While we detest the sentiment of this site and the article in question, we support First Amendment rights and, similar to the principles of free speech, that sometimes means allowing such tasteless, ignorant content," he told The Daily Beast.
If Trump is truly concerned about boosting the competitiveness of U.S. companies, particularly with respect to China, he'll first need to get a grasp on how platforms like Alibaba are opening the door to the imbalances he proclaims to detest.
When journalists and commentators use the Stalin analogy, when they call President Trump unhinged, mentally unfit, undermining world peace, a danger to western civilization, they are lowering the discourse in precisely the way they accuse the president who they detest.
Before we part ways, based on my previous conversations with friends and other wing-lovers, I feel it is my duty here to reveal to you one more fact: While I detest chicken wings, I actually do love fried chicken.
The gun bill was still approved, but the amendment infuriated liberal Democrats, who were forced to go on record supporting an immigration enforcement provision they detest, while proving an embarrassment to Democratic leaders who failed to keep their troops in line.
Facing a Donald Trump presidency, the vast majority of the American left has decided to support a politician that they sometimes detest and often distrust — even as they're already planning to push her the day she steps into the White House.
But Ms. Hyon's troupe, made up of young North Korean women known for their beauty, is expected to steal the Olympic show among South Koreans, many of whom detest the North Korean regime but feel ethnic affinity for their northern neighbors.
I mean the rest of the Trump despisers, the people who detest not only the man but also contemn his voters (and constantly let them know it); the ones who heard the words "basket of deplorables" and said to themselves: Bingo.
The only logical conclusion, they contend, is the one that Mr. Trump has already reached: The investigation led by Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel, is a "witch hunt" cooked up by Democrats desperate to undermine a president they detest.
Schiff's reckless statements in the runup to the Mueller report and now this week's impeachment arguments were a continuation of the Democratic emotion to never concede the 2016 election -- and to never acknowledge the legitimacy of a man they detest.
The possibility of a Democratic mega-landslide is dramatized by Trump's disastrous poll ratings — and the degree his behavior hyper-motivates those who detest it to vote and hyper-alienates voters who have previously voted Republican but will not this year.
Other members of the Democratic caucus grappled publicly with their choice between voting no to register their opposition to immigration policies they detest or supporting the measure to maintain funding for other national security programs and avoid another government shutdown.
" He accused lawmakers of harboring "Impeachment Fever," calling out several key players in the investigation by name, and said that members who vote to impeach are showing "how deeply they revile the voters and how truly they detest America's Constitutional order.
It is trapped between a Republican president who bullies Republicans in Congress into publicly defending wrongs they privately detest and an electoral majority divided between those who want Trump impeached and removed from office and those who want him defeated for reelection.
Trump's data model was different than the ones used by many pollsters—it predicted an angrier, older, whiter electorate that was more responsive to Trump's message, and more likely to identify Hillary Clinton as a representative of the political establishment that they detest.
Environmentalists detest the nomination, and have poured time and money into highlighting his political ties to the fossil fuel industry, his tepid position on the science behind climate change and his litigious history against the very department he is now nominated to lead.
You can't detest racial-dragnet-policy stop-and-frisk policing as not only morally abhorrent but thoroughly unconstitutional and risk the ascendance of a man who on Wednesday reportedly suggested that he would consider using stop-and-frisk more across the nation.
In response to the filibuster threat, and after not being able to marshal a supermajority to end the filibuster, the Republican leader invoked the so-called "nuclear option,"(a phrase which I detest) whereby Judge Gorsuch could be confirmed by a majority.
On both sides of the Atlantic, a loose network of activists and political figures on the right have spent years seeking to cast Mr. Soros not just as a well-heeled political opponent but also as the personification of all they detest.
For that matter, a person can detest the conservative stacking of the court — and seethe over the manner in which Mitch McConnell blocked Merrick Garland — and accept that Trump, in elevating Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch, didn't commit some treachery or abuse his office.
"While we detest the sentiment of hate sites, we support a free and open Internet and, similar to the principles of free speech, that sometimes means allowing such tasteless, ignorant content," Digital Crimes Unit director Ben Butler wrote in a comment to The Verge.
He's getting huge, unintended breaks from Republican elders and rivals who mostly detest him and rightly believe that he'd lead the party to ruin in a general election but are distracted by other quarry — Donald Trump, Marco Rubio — and are letting him slither by.
At home, most Leave-voters detest the current deal so vehemently that they would rather quit with no deal at all (another dreadful legacy of Mrs May, who spent two years saying Britain could prosper with no deal, before admitting that she was wrong).
"If you understand the modern day Republican Party, not at the donor level but at the grassroots level, these are people who are in it for their true beliefs and their cause," he said, adding they'll detest being told by party powerbrokers what to do.
There is a faction in America that seems to thoroughly detest the idea of being American; it is ashamed of our nation's imperfections, it apologizes profusely for our continued existence, and it wants the America as envisioned and formed by our Founders to be dismantled.
She should dramatize the moral imperative of ending the destruction of democracy from the Citizens United decision, explain how that decision promotes the evils voters that detest about politics, and propose a clear and powerful agenda of an economy that lifts all American boats.
What this leaves out is that Trump is attacking other Democratic candidates; his rantings and negative ads are unlikely to influence Democratic primary voters who generally detest him; and Biden's leading rivals have amassed far more money than he without dabbling in super PACs.
" She was a Democrat running on an explicitly feminist and anti-racist platform, but she had "grown to detest many of the white Northern liberals" who would say all the right things but then disappear when the time came "to put the heat on . . .
The nation's largest cable and phone companies, along with their GOP allies in Congress, detest the FCC's net neutrality policy, which they say amounts to a "big government" overreach that has subjected them to onerous new regulations and reduced their appetite for infrastructure investment.
Beyond the irony of an entire story being published using the sort of background quotes that most journalists claim to detest, the article showed that some members of the press corps are selective or hypocritical with their outrage over who attends White House briefings.
The Common Core got caught up in an old-fashioned culture war, one that pitted activists on both the right and left, who came to detest the Core, against an education policy establishment that was sometimes surprised by the fierce resistance to its actions.
If you study Ireland's politics, read its great writers or visit the Emerald Isle, you soon learn that these folks use language in a way that puts the rest of the English speaking world to shame, and there's nothing they detest more than a phony.
" And in an unusually frank assessment of an incumbent politician, Mr. Carroll wrote in 1979, "Since his father helped him buy a seat in the New York State Assembly, Andrew J. Stein has lived most of his professional life among people who detest him.
Big picture, the damage Trump does to the Republican Party is that he polarizers, emotionalizes and energizes the huge number of voters who thoroughly detest what Trump is doing to America, or merely disapprove what Trump is doing to America sufficiently enough to inspire them to vote.
Ronald Otto Louis Kuhler was born in 1931 in Teaneck, New Jersey; his mother, Simmone Gillet Kuhler, whom he would grow to detest, came from Belgium; his father, Otto Kuhler, a designer of streamlined trains and an amateur painter, had emigrated to the United States from Germany.
Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. was an architect of the 1994 crime bill that many criminal justice advocates detest, and others, such as Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, have previously taken positions on issues like gun control that are controversial on the left.
You detest cruelty, discrimination, and dishonesty, which makes you a great person to give objective advice, but it also means you have a tendency to get stuck on moral or philosophical questions of what's right and wrong—even in the small stuff that you deal with everyday.
While I detest the 'fire Gibbons' refrain whenever the team plays poorly, I can't help but feel that it is a legitimate criticism of Gibbons and the coaching staff for not doing the right things during spring training to adequately prepare the team to start the season well.
The generally snobbish and often racist British establishment of the day came to detest the munshi with an almost comical fervor, and, led by Victoria's son and heir, Bertie, who later reigned as Edward VII, persecuted even Abdul Karim's memory when he and his love were both long gone.
An even more crucial question is whether administration officials who openly detest the law will lead a vigorous nationwide push to persuade the uninsured to buy policies sold under its banner, and existing customers to keep their coverage, when open enrollment for next year starts on Nov. 1.
I declare once again, as I did in the presence of the court: I detest as the greatest of crimes the horrors which were perpetrated against the Jews and think it right that the initiators of these terrible deeds will stand trial before the law now and in the future.
The Owens fit into a few trends — such as #vanlife, which is exactly what it sounds like: people living in vans, as well as the FIRE movement, which stands for "financial independence, retire early" and is mostly composed of young people who detest cubicles and desire a self-made schedule.
As much as I detest Trump's nasty rhetoric, I equally dislike Clinton's record, be it her email scandal, the continued rise of terrorism since her tenure as secretary of state, the Benghazi scandal, or her foundation's hypocritical ties to oppressive regimes that suppress the rights of women and LGBTQ people.
Some people may detest this, but I like to let the milk soak for a bit so that it almost turns into a porridge, and the blueberries become slightly reconstituted and a little more flavorful, and I can pretend that the field that they came from is just beyond the ridge.
" He continued, "I declare once again, as I did in the presence of the court: I detest as the greatest of crimes the horrors which were perpetrated against the Jews and think it right that the initiators of these terrible deeds will stand trial before the law now and in the future.
Luther was a brave and brilliant man, but he was not the innovator he is made out to be by those who venerate him, those who detest him, or those who simply carry on in milder form with the assumptions about him that were established in the old days of raging religious polemic.
As Mr. Trump unveils his budget plans this week — against the backdrop of a health care bill that Mr. Mulvaney's former colleagues detest — the man charged with executing the White House's fiscal vision is a figure who, not very long ago, might well have been leading the opposition to much of it.
As much as he will no doubt come to detest Obama lingering on the national scene past his presidency, it's a safe bet that if Trump leaves office with the amount of vigor with which he came in, his former-presidency will show him also being a "discontented ghost" for his own successor as well.
"I work with technology, but I really detest the term 'new media' because I'm fully aware of experimentation in these fields that goes back 100 years," Mr. Lozano-Hemmer said, citing the pioneering work of the Argentine artist and writer Marta Minujín, who was an early maker of Conceptual work with an interactive bent.
" The house itself "screams Suburban Nouveau Riche, the kind of place I aspired to as a kid from my split-level, shag-carpet side of town" — Nick grew up in the town — and is the kind of house they both hate: "generically grand, unchallenging, new, new, new house that my wife would — and did — detest.
The Judge might as well throw the book and prosecute me to the fullest extent of the Law—for I have been a ganja-eating nak muay farang (western kickboxer) for the last 28 years, and will probably remain a regular and confirmed "pothead" (I loathe and detest that word!) for the rest of my natural life.
And the voters had grown to detest a political establishment that refused to change the status quo, refused to stop illegal immigration, refused to stop the flow of jobs from the Rust Belt to Mexico, Vietnam and China, refused to care about their concerns about how globalization was destroying the America they once knew and loved.
As a conservative Democrat in a rural district that voted for President Trump by a 30-point margin, Mr. Peterson is a man in the lonely middle, now besieged on all sides — by Republican rivals determined to yoke him to impeachment and by Democrats who want their congressman to stand up to a president they detest.
Trump is taking a huge risk by governing in a way that hypermotivates his base but hyperalienates the far larger number of voters who oppose or detest him — voters who can give Democrats a landslide victory in 2018 if they come out in large numbers, as they did in 2017, or elect another Republican Congress if they do not.
"While we detest the sentiment of this site and the article in question, we support First Amendment rights and, similar to the principles of free speech, that sometimes means allowing such tasteless, ignorant content," the company said a month ago when asked by the Daily Beast why it allowed Daily Stormer to register its domain using the service.
Yet the fact that many Sanders delegates continued to occupy the media tent rather than their seats in the arena during the speech suggests it's still more likely that the Clintons will have to face the fact that this is not their party any longer, and that their best hope is that Sanders supporters will detest Trump more than they distrust Hillary.
While it is true that very liberal voters are less supportive of Biden, those tepid feelings pale in comparison to how much they detest President TrumpDonald John TrumpNorth Korea asking for aid, while denying any coronavirus cases: report Iranian official maintains Tehran has 'no knowledge' of American hostage's whereabouts Unemployment claims surge to 2202 million as coronavirus devastates economy MORE.
The biggest losers of the GOP Supreme Court scheme will be Republican senators and candidates running in New Hampshire, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, Florida, Pennsylvania and other states in which close elections could well be tipped to Democrats by a roused Democratic base and outraged moderate and independent voters, who will conclude that the Republican Senate itself represents everything they detest about the partisanship and dysfunction of Washington.
For a long time, the conventional wisdom has been that governors, not members of Congress, make better, more successful candidates, because they can tout executive experience and aren't associated with the stink of Washington, D.C. But in the Republican race up until this point, two senators, Rubio and Ted Cruz, seemed to be faring much better than the governors they are running against, even though voters detest Washington more than ever.
All four Archie Fergusons share the same origin story, one that has much in common with Auster's: a paternal grandfather who arrives in the United States with a Jewish name, which gets converted to something more Gentile-friendly on Ellis Island; a family history marred by murder; an emotionally remote, entrepreneurial father; a childhood in suburban New Jersey, a place that Archie, in all his incarnations, comes to detest.
In 1975, despite his professed dislike for the city, he moved to Los Angeles to record Station to Station, an experience he would later detail in a 1979 television interview with Mavis Nicholson: "I went to Los Angeles and I lived there for a couple of years, which is a city I really detest, amongst people that I didn't like very much, to see what would happen to my writing," he said.
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