Execrate :
exsecrantur, vicini metuunt
odium, nauseae habent, eaque detestor, dominationemque contemnunt, despectare, exsecrantur, vicini metuunt, execratione maledicta congessit, EXSECROR, qua ratione detester, damnare, Devotione devovimus
detestariexsecrabilisexecraturblasphemaverit
detestariexsecrabilisexecraturblasphemaverit
Verb(1) find repugnant(2) curse or declare to be evil or anathema or threaten with divine punishment
(1) Unionists would praise the prescience of the men of 1707, Jacobites and nationalists would execrate them, but in itself such a union was probably no more momentous than its architects were moral.(2) Didn't Trotsky execrate those who claimed to believe there was nothing to choose between democracy and fascism?(3) She execrated , her expression wild and vengeful.(4) Those who disagreed with his theories were execrated and removed from their posts, sometimes with the help of the NKVD.(5) The Cure are the personification of the not-quite and the not-yet: not quite execrated but never really respected; not punk veterans but not yet generic Goff.(6) I found that I didn't much miss Ireland as such, and in fact in many ways I execrated it.(7) Such memoirs are naturally far removed from the poverty-riven atmosphere and harsh realities say of the recently widely acclaimed, and execrated , Angela's Ashes.(8) That was fortunate for Concord; after March 7, when the great orator endorsed the Fugitive Slave Law, Webster was execrated by many of his one-time worshipers.(9) I was about to yell right back with my own execration when I remembered the light in front of me read ÔÇÿNO WALKINGÔÇÖ in bright, glowing, orange letters.(10) There, Alexander is to be execrated because he conquered foreign peoples and overthrew an ancient empire.(11) Thus religious and political extremism are laid symbolically side by side for our execration .(12) George is certainly mocked, but he is not execrated as a vile foreigner and un-British despot, as he had been by satirists and cartoonists in the 1760s and 1770s, when he was widely despised.(13) Almost irrespective of what she does with them, the advantages that have been won from the green-field territories of 200 years ago make America an object of envy but also execration .(14) But it transformed the professor of comparative literature at Columbia into a very public intellectual, adored or execrated with equal intensity by many millions of readers.(15) An exhausted jumble of execrations directed at himself, the hellish place, and everything within it ran through his mind.(16) Those who murdered tourists in Egypt were widely execrated and not just because they threatened to ruin the tourist industry.
Related Phrases of execrate(1) execrate ::
exsecrantur, vicini metuunt
(1) execrate ::
exsecrantur, vicini metuunt
Synonyms
Verb
1. abhor ::
abhorrent,
2. loathe ::
nauseae habent
3. abominate ::
RANCIDUS
Verb
1. abhor ::
abhorrent,
2. loathe ::
nauseae habent
3. abominate ::
RANCIDUS
Antonyms
1. bless ::
benedicite
Different Formsexecrate, execrated, execrates, execrating
English to Latin Dictionary: execrate
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What execrate means in Latin, execrate meaning
in Latin, execrate
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of execrate in Latin language.