0 a dislike of something that you find unpleasant or unacceptable:
1 a dislike of something because you consider it unpleasant or unacceptable:
However, tolerance can be limited by discomfort, claustrophobic reactions to the nasal mask, nasal congestion, and conceptual distaste for long-term use of the apparatus.
Finally, however, 33 crossed the barrier but with obvious distaste.
Judicial distaste for science, then, came not from a distrust of it, but because judges simply had no use for it.
This, combined with an ethical distaste for genetics, fortified a science of development that riveted its attention on the social environment.
Perhaps his distaste for the magazine was due to its simultaneous occupation of the same critical territory as him.
Some language advocates express concern, opposition or distaste, to associating languages closely with a discourse of national security, intelligence gathering and military planning.
The elders pragmatically took this opportunity to express their loyalty to the government, expressing their distaste for the departed chief.
Senior officers shared a widely held distaste for prescriptive rules and for allowing their actions to be governed by abstract ideas.