Disrepute vs Abhorrence - What's the difference?
disrepute | abhorrence | Related terms |
Loss or want of reputation; ill character; disesteem; discredit.
*
* Sir Walter Scott
To bring into disreputation; to hold in dishonor.
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.
Disrepute is a related term of abhorrence.
As nouns the difference between disrepute and abhorrence
is that disrepute is loss or want of reputation; ill character; disesteem; discredit while abhorrence is extreme aversion or detestation; the feeling of utter dislike or loathing .As a verb disrepute
is to bring into disreputation; to hold in dishonor.disrepute
English
Noun
(-)- Herbarium material does not, indeed, allow one to extrapolate safely: what you see is what you get; what you get is classical alpha-taxonomy which is, very largely and for sound reasons, in disrepute today.
- At the beginning of the eighteenth century astrology fell into general disrepute .
