0 past simple and past participle of abhor
Local magistrates, for their part, abhorred the litigious society.
Both writers' works contain expositions of the theory of justification by faith alone, a doctrine the king abhorred.
But in shunning any attempt to give it correspondence to contemporary economic circumstances he left a vacuum which many historians have naturally abhorred.
She abhorred games of all kinds, suggesting that they appeal to the indolent without the imagination to invent their own learning and growing activities.
Ordinarily, high churchmen abhorred the idea of baptism by total immersion.
It was abhorred because it was perceived, wrongly or rightly, as an unjust tax levied upon the politically unrepresented producers of colonial wealth.
In the extreme case, environments of this type are abhorred as alien and likely to be contagious.
Any cruelty and any violence should be abhorred; it is uncivilised and unjustifiable.