Repugnancia in english
Disgust
pronunciation: dɪsgʌst part of speech: noun
pronunciation: dɪsgʌst part of speech: noun
In gestures
repugnancia = disgust ; distaste ; revulsion ; repulsion.
Example: I gave him a look of scorn and disgust, but he merely laughed at me.Example: Some detractors cite political reasons for this, for example the apparent scarcity of public funds and taxpayers' distaste for anything 'governmental'.Example: As part of the worldwide revulsion against the fierce crackdown of peaceful dissidents now occurring in Cuba, the U.S. Congress has voted 414-0 to condemn the Cuban government for raiding 22 libraries.Example: So, food repulsions take root in social imagination and the logic of food classification show what is eatable or not, what disgusts and what soils the soul.more:
» con gran repugnancia por + Posesivo + parte = much to + Posesivo + disgust .
Example: Much to her disgust, her family would not hear of anything except the local doctor's treatment, as they preferred his nostrums to homeopathy.» con repugnancia = disgustedly .
Example: 'Well, I don't know what's going on,' Pope continued disgustedly.» que da repugnancia = nauseatingly .
Example: He has written a piece on the West's growing habit of nauseatingly kowtowing to Islam and walking on eggshells whenever anything Islamic comes into the picture.