0 suspicion; lack of trust or faith -- nedůvěra
He has always had a distrust of politicians.
1 to have no trust in -- nedůvěřovat
He distrusts his own judgement
In this emerging political culture of confrontation, dialogue was distrusted and to 'be political ' involved a show of force.
In these problems, the decision maker does not use standard maximum likelihood estimators for his approximating model-he distrusts his likelihood function.
The elite distrusts democracy because it expects that any attempt at broad-based democracy will cause the society to spiral out of control.
He simply distrusted politics and relied more on cultural, psychological and aesthetic stimulation to change.
He did not find one because he distrusted quantum mechanics.
Parents were often unaware of, or unable to use, blocking software and rating services; they also distrusted self-regulation by web-site operators.
On the whole, the economic elites had solid reasons for distrusting a corporatist-style arrangement.
They were not respecters of party lines and the last two in particular were widely distrusted among parliamentary colleagues.