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51 Sentences With "detesting"

How to use detesting in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "detesting" and check conjugation/comparative form for "detesting". Mastering all the usages of "detesting" from sentence examples published by news publications.

If you already detest Dr. Phil, they will shore up your conviction that he is indeed worth detesting.
The assailant called me a nigger just before he took a swing at me for no reason other than detesting the color of my skin.
He not only resorts and succumbs to it, but experiences a duality of embracing it for survival, yet detesting himself and the world he lives in.
He grew up detesting his parents' country music but would borrow his sister's record player to play Van Halen and Aerosmith albums when she wasn't home.
If this theory is right, then you'd expect her negative favorables to be driven almost entirely by Republicans detesting her and everyone else not being as familiar with her.
And for months, Trump seemed to waffle between supporting the far-right, identity politics–detesting candidates Bannon proposed for Congress and the more mainstream Republicans favored by the GOP establishment.
The beacon that the Cuban Revolution once represented to the world had become nothing more than a grimy night light, with the Cuban people openly detesting Fidel himself -- once a sacred cow -- and his interminable gerontocracy.
I remember detesting Bruce Patman, the megarich douchebag who dated Jessica and who had a Porsche with the vanity plates "1BRUCE1," and I recall finding Todd Wilkins, Elizabeth's on-off boyfriend through the series, functional and a little bit boring.
Often mocked, ridiculed, and met with regular derision, these jean-legging hybrids have been cast to the bottom of fashion food chains — where everyone from The Daily Beast (deeming it "The Trend From Hell") to Cosmopolitan (detesting its "front pocket fake-out" effect) have taken critical swings.
Donatello was almost a pacifist, detesting every time he used violence.
He argues that while both Islam and America can be subject to legitimate criticisms without detesting a people as a whole, bigotry against both are on the rise.
Dixon liked and revered him for his air of detesting everything that presented itself to his senses, and of not meaning to let this detestation become staled by custom.
Detesting direct confrontation, he was a master "dinner table" politician. He was known for inviting his competitors to dinner to plant the seeds of his ideas and defuse controversies.See Parlor Politics, pp. 20–30.
Because of the same thinking about detesting men in the three women, they become very good friends. Zzen Chang acts as Stella Ng's good buddy in the show, the only man that she trusts.
Such a person is called a munafiq or hypocrite. God says: Verily the hypocrites will be in the lowest depths of Hell. You will find no one to help them. # Kufrul-Kurh: Disbelief out of detesting any of God's commands.
Aman misunderstands Roshni to be a gold digger. He starts detesting her and gives her a cheque in exchange of marrying him. Aman and Roshni get married. Roshni feels a connection with Aman but is hurt by his rude behaviour.
A campaign in official Party newspapers saw a direct connection with the Red Lanterns of 1900. Official editorials attacked Liu Shaoqi, Mao’s former second in command, for detesting the Boxers, and called upon the Red Guards to carry on the spirit of the Red Lanterns.Cohen, pp. 263–270.
Sayyam tries to kill him on several occasions but Suhani intervenes each time. Sayyam forces Suhani to get him married to an unwilling Krishna who has been in love with Yuvaan but Suhani is forced to relent. Krishna starts detesting Suhani who gets Sayyam's former girlfriend Baby married to Yuvaan. It is revealed Sambhav is alive, disguised as Yuvraj.
At last, detesting her life, Gudrun casts herself into the sea, which refuses to take her. Sitting on the edge of the sea, Gudrun ponders her woes. At long last, she calls upon Sigurd and, reminding him of their wedding vows, she implores him to return to her. Again she casts herself into the sea, wherein her grief is finally drowned.
Her family moved to St. Louis, and her father, Alonzo Jones, deserted them. Eldorado first took work as a teacher in Lafayette, Indiana; detesting this job, she became a stenographer at an insurance company in Chicago. By 1913, however, she had become an inventor, and opened an all-women factory in Moline, Illinois, dedicated to manufacturing her creations. She devised an airplane muffler in 1919.
He (Imam Ali) was created from his (the Prophet) clay and branched from his plant. He (the Prophet) singled him (Imam Ali) with his secret, regarded him as the gate of the city of his knowledge, informed the Muslims of love for him, showed the hypocrites through their detesting him. He (Imam Ali) still supported him (the Prophet) through helping him and followed the Sunna of his straightness.
Ebert said after detesting North he was very happy and pleased to give Reiner's next film a unanimously positive review. Siskel praised Douglas and Bening for their performances; he did, however, disapprove of Janet Hirshenson and Jane Jenkins' decision to cast Douglas and Sheen in the same film and especially in similar roles within that film, expressing the worry that the similarity between the two actors' appearances would lead audiences to confuse their respective characters.
This notion of being the last vanguard between the destruction of the West and the rise of uncivilized, uncultured man permeates not only Reck's compositions and Spengler's writings, but also the life of Junker Ewald von Kleist-Schmenzin. Von Kleist-Schmenzin, as a member of the aristocracy, took issue with the rule of Hitler. Detesting the industrious, modern Germany which had abandoned rural influence and culture, von Kleist-Schmenzin participated in the July 20 Plot.
While Súper Cholita uses her powers to help the poor, her behavior is not always as exemplary as that of most superheroes. She has been shown as a boastful, strident complainer, inclined to stuff herself with rellenos de papa, who is not above pilfering from a female potato vendor or bribing a policeman to avoid arrest. She possesses strong views, detesting imperialism and corrupt politicos, criticizing looters, and standing against the autonomy movements threatening Bolivia's unity.
They fear his retribution, and while privately detesting him are powerless to free themselves from his influence. Mary's younger sister Betty (Jane Bryan) comes to visit, and unaware of the dangerous situation she has entered, behaves recklessly against the advice of her older sister. When she is killed, Mary agrees to testify against the gangster. Beaten by his thugs, scarred and disfigured, she becomes the "marked woman" of the film's title, but rather than silencing her, it strengthens her resolve to testify.
Bracara Augusta, the modern city of Braga and former capital of Gallaecia, became the capital of the Suebi. Apart from cultural and some linguistic traces, the Suebians left the highest Germanic genetic contribution of the Iberian Peninsula in Portugal and Galicia. Orosius, at that time resident in Hispania, shows a rather pacific initial settlement, the newcomers working their lands"the barbarians, detesting their swords, turn them into ploughs", Historiarum Adversum Paganos, VII, 41, 6. or serving as bodyguards of the locals.
When Qiuyi becomes pregnant, she seeks refuge in a Buddhist temple but is cast out when the nuns discover her pregnancy - soon after, the baby miscarries. Left in the training camp, Xiao'e undergoes her ideological re-education and emerges from her ordeal as a factory worker. Detesting physical labor, she goes on to marry Laopu and has a child with him, forcing him to steal money from work. When Laopu is caught, he is sentenced to death, and Xiao'e abandons him and her child to remarry.
As an adolescent, Fano was rebellious against adult authority, detesting their conformity, their oppressive spirit and the ponderous atmosphere that enveloped them. In the novel Novel "Quasi una fantasia" by Ettore Cantoni, Publisher Sellerio, edited by Bruno Maier (1994)."Quasi una fantasia" (Almost as a phantastic story) by Ettore Cantoni there is talk of two boys, in which it is easy to recognize the author Ettore and his friend Giorgio Fano, who travel and even arrive in Africa, precisely to escape the environment established by adults. A rebellious boy, he refused to accept school discipline.
Republic declared, 1931 The final period of de Villores’ leadership term was even more turbulent than the initial one, marked by advent of the Republic and death of Jaime III. Initially de Villores was disoriented like most Carlists were: delighted to see the loathed Alfonsist monarchy toppled, but detesting the republican democracy even more.Blinkhorn 2008, p. 41 He followed the initial conciliatory manifesto of the claimant, who ordered his followers to assist the provisional government in maintaining order and defending Catholic sites until a genuine national assembly is elected.
" Such suppression was assisted by conservatives detesting the Tudeh Party, which was later outlawed and allied with Mossadegh.Michele Penner Angris, Party Building in the Modern Middle East (US: University of Washington Press, 2011), 131. One Iranian conservative newspaper even editorialized: > "...the Tudeh Party, with its santonic doctrine of class struggles, has > incited ignorant workers to violate the sacred right of private property and > inflict social anarchy upon the center of the country. This uprising proves > that Tudeh is an enemy of private property, of Iran, and of Islam.
59 (when he turned 26) while her minor sister's match with Magnus' son was probably arranged around the time of the Luca and Ravenna conferences (spring 56 BC), with the marriage taking place in Pompeius' second consulate after Appius returned from Sardinia. It was an interesting choice of in-laws (adfines) since Brutus refused to speak to Pompeius Magnus until the Civil War, detesting him as a tyrant and the murderer of his father. As he had no living sons, he adopted his nephew Gaius Claudius Pulcher, who changed his name to Appius Claudius Pulcher, and who became consul in 38 BC.
Caught between dedication to socialist ideals and detesting Stalin's methods, Krivitsky believed that it was his duty to inform. That decision caused him much mental anguish, as he impressed on American defector Whittaker Chambers, as he told Chambers, "In our time, informing is a duty" (recounted by Chambers in his autobiography, Witness). Krivitsky testified before the Dies Committee (later to become the House Un-American Activities Committee) in October 1939, and sailed as "Walter Thomas" to London in January 1940 to be debriefed by Jane Archer of British Military Intelligence, MI5. In doing so, he revealed much about Soviet espionage.
He believed that the Cimarrons were "a people detesting the proud governance of the Spaniards" and so would gladly move to these new colonies by the hundreds or thousands. His thinking followed that this ideal colony would be easy to sustain without the presence of Spanish tyranny and with the willingness of the Cimarrons to live a happy and satisfied existence in the colonies. The Cimarrons would also be useful in allowing the English to access all the gold mines of Peru. Hakluyt also wanted to include in this colony "condemned English men and women, in whom there may be founde hope of amendment".
As Luke's friends abandon him for what he did to Akzeriuth, Luke starts detesting his current form and makes a promise to Tear to change for the best. He then starts working with Jade to protect the people of St. Binah whose town is also collapsing like Akzeriuth. In order to prevent more of these collapses, the group takes advantage of Luke's hyperresonance skills to move the land to the subarea, the Qliphoth. In the meantime, they are opposed by Van's forces except Asch who is against his master's wishes of a new world populated by replicas in order to go against the score.
Aaliya soon finds Barkat's behaviour suspicious and it is revealed that she is actually Mir's biological daughter who is after the Abdullahs' family wealth and property. Aaliya and Zain work together and finally succeed in exposing Barkat and she is thrown out the house but before going, Barkat poisons Suraiyya's mind against Aaliya telling her she is having an affair with Zubair and thus Suraiyya once again starts detesting Aaliya. She plots to separate Zain and Aaliya by creating misunderstandings between them. Nafisa who is sick of Suraiyya's attitude towards her and favouring Shazia over her plots revenge and reports Suraiyya of claims that she abuses Aaliya.
Two little wee white > coffins at the gate waiting, and a third wanted. I was glad to see them, for > at Springfontein, a young woman had to be buried in a sack, and it hurt > their feelings woefully. > It is such a curious position, hollow and rotten to the heart’s core, to > have made all over the State large uncomfortable communities of people whom > you call refugees and say you are protecting, but who call themselves > prisoners of war, compulsorily detained, and detesting your protection. They > are tired of being told by officers that they are refugees under "the kind > and beneficient protection of the British".
Peyton Place is a 1957 American drama film directed by Mark Robson, and starring Lana Turner, Hope Lange, Lee Philips, Lloyd Nolan, Diane Varsi, Arthur Kennedy, Russ Tamblyn, and Terry Moore. It follows numerous residents of a small fictional New England mill town in the years surrounding World War II, where scandal, homicide, suicide, incest, and moral hypocrisy belie its tranquil façade. It is based on the bestselling 1956 novel of the same name by Grace Metalious. The film was developed with Metalious serving as a story consultant, though the screenwriters' exclusion of some of the film's more salacious elements resulted in Metalious abandoning the project and openly detesting the film.
Let me summon as my witnesses > our grandfathers Rusticus and Apollinaris, whom like fortunes and aversions > united in a noble friendship. They had a similar taste in letters, their > characters were alike; they had enjoyed similar dignities and undergone the > same dangers. They were equally agreed in detesting the inconstancy of > Constantine, the irresolution of Jovinus, the perfidy of Gerontius; both > singling out the fault proper to each person, and both finding in Dardanus > the sum of all existing vices. If we come down to the years between their > time and our own, we find our fathers brought up together from their tender > youth until they came to manhood.
Jean-Antoine Houdon, Voltaire, 1778, National Gallery of Art In February 1778, Voltaire returned for the first time in over 25 years to Paris, among other reasons to see the opening of his latest tragedy, Irene. The five-day journey was too much for the 83-year-old, and he believed he was about to die on 28 February, writing "I die adoring God, loving my friends, not hating my enemies, and detesting superstition." However, he recovered, and in March he saw a performance of Irene, where he was treated by the audience as a returning hero. He soon became ill again and died on 30 May 1778.
Pinelli stood out among the early bibliophile collectors who established scientific bases for the methodically assembled private library, aided by the comparatively new figure--in the European world-- of the bookseller. His love of books and manuscripts, and his interest in optics, labored under a disability: a childhood mishap had destroyed the vision of one eye, forcing him to protect his weak vision with green-tinted lenses. Cautious and withdrawn by nature, detesting travel whether by road or canal boat, wracked by the gallstones that eventually killed him, he found solace in the library he amassed over a period of fifty years (Nuovo 2003). Leonardo's treatise on painting, Trattato della Pittura, was transcribed in the Codex Pinellianus ca.
This not only demonstrates his devotion to science, but also his ambition to acquire fame and recognition as a scientist. Very early on, it is established that Einstein and Haber are each other's foil, both with a very different outlook on life and the future of science. While Einstein does not care much for his nationality and cultural identity, Haber, who is strongly nationalistic, feels obliged to serve his country. In the opening scene, Haber praises the German education system as "the best in the world", while Einstein retorts that being a German born and raised was "no privilege for [him]", detesting the structure and interconnecting the differing stances the two brilliant scientists have on nationality and scientific belief (Thiessen 10).
Edward Ishmael Dolnick (born November 10, 1952) is an American writer, formerly a science writer at the Boston Globe. He has been published in Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times Magazine, and The Washington Post, among other publications. Dolnick's book The Rescue Artist: A True Story of Art, Thieves, and the Hunt for a Missing Masterpiece (2005)—an account of the 1994 theft, and eventual recovery, of Edvard Munch's The Scream from Norway's National Gallery in Oslo—won the 2006 Edgar Award in the Best Crime Fact category. His 2008 book, The Forger's Spell, describes the 1930-1940s forging of Johannes Vermeer paintings by a critic-detesting Dutch artist, accepted as "masterpieces" by art experts until the artist's confession and trial in 1945.
1, p. 9 The original Cambridge group however also included John Vincent, another historian, and Edward Norman, a theologian and historian. As Scruton says in his semi- autobiographical book, Gentle Regrets: Thoughts From a Life,Gentle Regrets: Thoughts From a Life by Roger Scruton, Continuum 2005 it influenced a new generation of neo-con thinkers including Charles Moore, former editor of The Daily Telegraph and the Chief Rabbi, Dr Jonathan Sacks. Scruton himself offers the French post-war President Charles De Gaulle as a model because the General defined the French nation in terms of its high culture, while detesting the philosopher Michael Foucault, who he says was 'one of the gurus' of his students, for shallow relativism and for teaching that `truth' requires inverted commas.
On the other hand, Vic has a warm and affectionate contact with a Progressive Catholic priest working in a slum neighborhood, who appears in several books, and who can always be relied on to give discreet help and provide refuge to various fugitives and wayward youths which Vic encounters. The same distinction between "Progressives" and "Reactionaries" is also made in Vic's encounters with various Protestant clergy. Vic makes quite clear where she stands politically - detesting the Republican Party and all its works, also not very enthusiastic about the Democratic Party establishment but on occasion supporting Progressive Democrat candidates. The cases she works on often get her involved with ethnic minorities - Blacks, Hispanics, Muslims and others - and she feels sympathy for illegal immigrants and occasionally gives then direct aid.
He is a sports fan but thinks lowly of youths knowing anything about sports. He dislikes men without moustaches as he believes such men are characterless. Chandran, however, has a moustache; the doctor advises Chandran to take care of the other problems by acting in a manner Sriramachandramurthy appreciates: namely wearing a Nehru jacket for a usual dress given the poverty in the country, to always tell his full name, giving importance to his moustache, behaving decently, showing a lack of interest in sports and drama considering that they do not promote any well being to the home or the country, respecting one's parents and detesting the concept of having someone else recommend a person for jobs instead of recommending for oneself. Sriramachandramurthy hires him immediately after Chandran impresses him.
The same year, Gârbea voluntarily reduced his contributions to drama and theater criticism, citing his family obligations, alongside a general disappointment with the milieu: "I grew aware that writing for the theater is usually not followed by productions. Although plays I signed were constantly performed, I never had productions at a satisfactory level nor significant material gains, except for translations." Instead, he focused on writing a fantasy novel for the youth, Făt Frumos din lună ("Făt Frumos from the Moon") and a cycle of poems known as Cântecele lui Huppy ("Huppy's Songs"), as well as on reviewing for publishing the memoirs of his grandfather Titus Gârbea. Working with Editura Tritonic publishing house, Gârbea also coordinated an anthology of political fiction, in which he included his own novella Detestarea naţiunii ("Detesting the Nation").
Functions empower you to express, 'This is our character and what we regard'. A couple of functions may have been passed on from your grandparents or distinctive relatives, thus Naulkha rules, a family that should sing together, eat together, and live respectively is a power to battle about materialistic custom. With her solid on-screen nearness and way of life as a craftsman Bushra Ansari ' Noor Jehan ' started the Naulakha debate at the first, and later it turned out to be so critical for the rest that Naulkha may snap the relationship in only a couple of scenes. In any case, it's completely clear that everybody other than Akbar Ali and Zain despises Noor Jehan for being voracious for Naulkha, additionally, Tehreem restricts her mom for detesting Shafaq and her Noor Jehan.
Brothers Ron and Russell Mael grew up in Pacific Palisades, in western Los Angeles County, California, during the "Golden Age" of the LA club scene, with the Doors, Love and the Standells regularly playing the Whisky a Go Go on Sunset Strip and the Beach Boys playing the afternoon event Teenage Fair. Both Ron and Russell Mael are seen in the audience during the Ronettes' section of the concert film The Big T.N.T. Show, filmed in 1966. Both attended UCLA, Ron studying cinema and graphic art and Russell, theatre arts and filmmaking. Detesting the folk music scene, which they considered "cerebral and sedate and we had no time for that", they developed a particular taste in English bands of the time such as the Who, Syd Barrett's Pink Floyd, the Kinks and the Move, which led to their description of themselves as "Anglophiles".
A young literary critic at Le Matin de Paris at the end of the 1970s, he became a novelist, met with success immediately and collected several literary prizes. He then left Paris for the Isle of Man where he settled in the capital, Douglas, a town of barely more than 20,000 inhabitants. He devotes himself only to the writing between two voyages. French detesting France, a specialist in the period from Napoleon III to the First World War (which he considers to be "an accident that is incomprehensible to me, I try to understand what could have provoked this manifestation of the death instinct of the West and I like to dream what would have been this century without the war"), he particularly likes to depict with many details the lives of artists going through this era.
Batten married first in 1625 Margaret Browne, daughter of William Browne, by whom he had six children, of whom at least four survived him: William junior (a barrister of Lincoln's Inn), Benjamin, who followed his father into the Navy, Mary, who married James Lemon (or Leming), and Martha (born 1637) who in 1663 married William Castle, a shipwright ("I do not envy him his wife," wrote Pepys spitefully). All the children and their spouses are referred to in Pepys's Diary: he has little good to say of them in general (detesting William Castle in particular), although with his usual eye for an attractive woman, he admired young William Batten's wife, Margaret Alcock. Rather illogically, given his poor personal relations with the family, he was offended at not being invited to the christening of young William's first child (yet another William) in 1663. Margaret Browne's brother, Captain John Browne, was master of the ship Rosebush.
As governor of Jund al-Urdunn, Umar apparently questioned Peter of Capitolias, who was made a Christian saint, at some point before his adjudication and execution by al-Walid I. Representing the interests of Marwanid (Umayyad ruling house) princes negatively affected by Caliph Umar II's () economic policies, which reversed al-Walid I's liberal distribution of war spoils among members of the ruling family, Umar wrote a letter to the caliph; in it he accuses the caliph of abandoning his predecessor's policies, accusing them of oppression and detesting their descendants, to which the caliph responded by alleging the Umayyads abandoned the correct path by misusing public funds, illicitly shedding blood and ruling tyrannically. He is recorded by the sources being in a lawsuit in 738/39 with the Alid rebel leader Zayd ibn Ali, which was settled by Caliph Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik. He is recorded again having a dispute with his cousin, Caliph al- Walid II () over a slave girl seized by the caliph. According to the historian al-Ya'qubi (d.

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