Antipathy vs Abhorrence - What's the difference?
antipathy | abhorrence |
Contrariety or opposition in feeling; settled aversion or dislike; repugnance; distaste.
* Inveterate antipathies against particular nations, and passionate attachments to others, are to be avoided. --Washington.
Natural contrariety; incompatibility; repugnancy of qualities; as, oil and water have antipathy.
* A habit is generated of thinking that a natural antipathy exists between hope and reason. --I. Taylor.
Extreme aversion or detestation; the feeling of utter dislike or loathing.
* {{quote-book
, year=1818
, author=Mary Shelley
, title=Frankenstein
, chapter=9
, url=http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/s/shelley/mary/s53f/chapter9.html
, passage=My abhorrence of this fiend cannot be conceived.}}
(obsolete, historical) An expression of abhorrence, in particular any of the parliamentary addresses dictated towards Charles II.
A person or thing that is loathsome; a detested thing.
