0 to not like someone or something: --
[ + -ing verb ] I dislike walking and I hate camping.
Why do you dislike her so much?
2 to not like; to find someone or something unpleasant, difficult, etc.: --
He especially disliked the fact that she went out after the curfew to carry out her activities and meet with other activists.
While in principle hereditary monarchy may have been disliked, it rarely took centre-stage in the analysis.
We cannot conclude that the identified group was disliked more than all other groups in the nation.
The president similarly values cabinet members from his coalition, and dislikes ministers from the premier's coalition.
If a person strongly disliked one party and strongly liked another, they would receive a high score on both preference measures.
Much of his analysis then depends on how intensely and how widely it is thus disliked.
Local authority contracts officers and purchasers, anxious not to (be seen to) waste money, therefore generally disliked such contracts.
More cognitively, do we not feel rapport when discovering that another person shares our likes and dislikes?