Asqueroso in english

Disgusting

pronunciation: dɪsgʌstɪŋ part of speech: adjective
In gestures

asqueroso = filthy ; revolting ; foul ; repulsive ; disgusting ; grungy ; squalid ; minger ; minging ; nasty ; appalling ; mucky ; icky ; yucky ; creepy ; creep ; lowdown ; nauseating ; nauseous ; sickening ; repugnant ; manky ; bilious ; yukky ; grotty . 

Example: Printing houses -- apart from the few that had been built for the purpose rather than converted from something else -- were generally filthy and badly ventilated.Example: This was so that the stuffing could be teased out and cleared of lumps, and so that the pelts could be softened by currying and soaking them in urine; the smell is said to have been revolting.Example: Well, we non-smokers also like to put our feet up and relax, too; but we have to breathe in their foul fumes = Well, we non-smokers also like to put our feet up and relax, too; but we have to breathe in their foul fumes.Example: A new indicator, representing the asymmetry of coauthorship links, was used to reveal the main 'attractive' and 'repulsive' centres of cooperation.Example: I find it disgusting but I guess that's human nature.Example: It is primarily a story about a girl who, pregnant, flees her disapproving family to search for the father of her child in the grungy and sinister Midlands of England.Example: The author examines Whistler's visits to the more squalid sections of the city, his views along the Thames and his portrayals of street urchins.Example: Everyone is attractive to someone, there is no such thing as a minger, but there are many people who I think are minging.Example: Everyone is attractive to someone, there is no such thing as a minger, but there are many people who I think are minging.Example: Anthony Datto thanked them for having permitted him to unburden himself and after a few desultory remarks about the nasty weather and nothing in particular, they parted.Example: His article, 'The skeleton in the closet: public libraries art collections suffer appalling losses,' examines the problem of theft and mutilation of art materials in public libraries.Example: Bulrush prefers full or partial sun, wet conditions, and soil that is mucky or sandy.Example: Neck buffs and balaclava's get the most icky, because you're usually breathing against them, and they tend to get a bit moist.Example: I saw Gina's post the other day where she said she feels 'fat and frumpish and yucky'.Example: Today I got followed home by a creepy man with a high-pitched voice.Example: The main character, Tom Johnson, realizes that no girls go out with creeps like him so he quickly changes and buys a guitar and learns how to play one.Example: The board clearly didn't care if its commissioner was a lowdown, lying, corrupt and untrustworthy creep, likely because that is the nature of the entire organization.Example: This can give rise to ambiguity: for one person 'fulsome praise' may be no more than 'generous', while for another it may mean 'nauseating sycophancy'.Example: The book emphasizes the 'nauseous pendulum' that swings between reason & violence.Example: One of our viewers wanted people to sign this petition asking for justice on these sickening teens who did this.Example: The abuses detailed in these pages are repugnant, but there is hope to be found by giving voice to the victims.Example: Bouncer who threw girl out of nightclub for having 'manky' feet is found guilty of assaulting her and a friend.Example: To think that a people who look civilised like the British could hold such a bilious grudge more than two decades after Thatcher had left office is unbelievable.Example: All our perceptions are either of one thing or another A or B, yummy or yukky.Example: I can't understand why he put us in such a grotty room when the hotel wasn't very full.

more:

» cosa asquerosanasty .

Example: Because it was a glory hole full of junk and lots of spiders and other nasties, I still have a bug hanging over one of the windows, but its made of wire and fish scales.

» oler asquerosostink to + high heavensmell + revoltingsmell + disgusting .

Example: Early on on a Friday night and three of the loos were out of order, the floor was covered in a layer of rancid water and it stank to high heaven.

Example: As far as mushrooms go, there are all sorts -- some smell revolting, some are deadly poisonous but some are also quite pretty.

Example: She smells disgusting; the reek of feces is almost too much to bear.

» saber asquerosotaste + disgustingtaste + revolting .

Example: Coffee tastes disgusting to me yet it delivers an enjoyable caffeine buzz that that the tastier energy drinks just cant deliver.

Example: It tastes revolting, like rotten apples mixed with gasoline, but it has a high alcohol content and it is cheap.

» tener un olor asquerosostink to + high heavensmell + revoltingsmell + disgusting .

Example: Early on on a Friday night and three of the loos were out of order, the floor was covered in a layer of rancid water and it stank to high heaven.

Example: As far as mushrooms go, there are all sorts -- some smell revolting, some are deadly poisonous but some are also quite pretty.

Example: She smells disgusting; the reek of feces is almost too much to bear.

» tener un sabor asquerosotaste + disgustingtaste + revolting .

Example: Coffee tastes disgusting to me yet it delivers an enjoyable caffeine buzz that that the tastier energy drinks just cant deliver.

Example: It tastes revolting, like rotten apples mixed with gasoline, but it has a high alcohol content and it is cheap.

» tiempo asquerosofoul weatherabominable weather .

Example: Always drive with your headlights on in foul weather no matter the time of day.

Example: On the third day it took five hours in abominable weather to descend the seven rappels of the east face.

Asqueroso synonyms

foul in spanish: falta, pronunciation: faʊl part of speech: adjective wicked in spanish: malvado, pronunciation: wɪkəd part of speech: adjective offensive in spanish: ofensiva, pronunciation: əfensɪv part of speech: adjective, noun loathsome in spanish: repugnante, pronunciation: loʊðsəm part of speech: adjective repellent in spanish: repelente, pronunciation: rɪpelənt part of speech: adjective, noun yucky in spanish: asqueroso, pronunciation: jʌki part of speech: adjective repellant in spanish: repelente, pronunciation: ripelənt part of speech: adjective revolting in spanish: repugnante, pronunciation: rivoʊltɪŋ part of speech: adjective distasteful in spanish: desagradable, pronunciation: dɪsteɪstfəl part of speech: adjective loathly in spanish: detestable, pronunciation: loʊθli part of speech: adjective disgustful in spanish: asqueroso, pronunciation: dɪsgʌsfəl part of speech: adjective
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