0 past simple and past participle of repulse
1 to push away or refuse something or someone unwanted, especially to successfully stop a physical attack against you:
2 If something repulses you, it causes you to have a strong feeling of dislike, disapproval, or disgust:
The tourists were repulsed by the filthy conditions.
Citizens who witnessed this when using the bathroom were immediately repulsed.
The key to the robustness of such an algorithm is the ability to ensure appropriate movement of all links distal to the one being repulsed.
Indeed, it is the gripping power of this implication that leaves most people repulsed by consistently utilitarian accounts of punishment.
If an intersection is found between a link and an ellipse, the link must then be repulsed from the ellipse.
They were particularly repulsed by flamboyant showmen who pandered to the hoi polloi with what were seen as vulgar demonstrations to fee-paying audiences.
Repelled and repulsed: twospotted spider mites react to agrochemicals.
These incursions were successfully repulsed.
It is far from obvious that the fact that we (the rich and healthy, presumably) are repulsed by something truly means that it is also morally reprehensible.