HOW INTENSE IS YOUR WILL?
UNDERSTAND EACH SYNONYM IN ITS CONCISE USAGE IN THE PHRASES
- Racial hatred
- Drinking hate
- Publicity dislike
- Fashion distaste
- Math aversion
- Business disfavor
- Hostility to outsiders
- Political antagonism
- Enmity between protestants and catholicism
- Friend animosity
- Disloyalty acrimony
- Deep-rooted antipathy
- Cultural abhorrence
- Secret society repugnance
USE EACH WORDS IN YOUR OWN CONTEXTS:
- Incitement to racial hatred is a crime under the laws of several countries.
- It’s going to be hard for you to leave drinking hate away if you still have positive feelings toward alcohol.
- It is the business model in most media to attract audience by providing content, and then lead the audience away from publicity dislike.
- This is partly due to fashion’s distaste for sincerity, but it’s also a symptom of an industry where the traditional path to success is slow and going astray.
- Existing empirical research on math aversion and anxiety is examined to determine the prevalance of negative dispositions toward math.
- As old fashioned light bulbs begin to fall into business disfavor, other types of light bulbs are beginning to come into popular use.
- New research explains how feelings of boredom can both strengthen solidarity within your in-group and heighten hostility toward outsiders.
- Every religion, with the growth of adherents, becomes a political force and its conflicts may arise over the direct ideological grounds to cause political antagonism.
- The enmity between Catholics and Protestants is rooted in history and caused by one man.
- Don’t live as molded by mass media to have friend animosity toward the previous relationships and past friends in all walks of life.
- Disloyalty acrimony is a story of love, hope, trust, hatred, sacrifice, divorce, anger, regret unparalled rage, and death.
- Why do we feel intense love and deep-rooted antipathy for someone in cycles?
- Right to the cultural value of the sacredness of life can lead to the spilling of blood as against the cultural abhorrence by shedding of blood.
- No one can forget secret society repugnance from the U.S President J.K. Kennedy: “The very word “secrecy” is repugnant in a free and open society; and we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secret societies, to secret oaths and to secret proceedings.”