I disapprove of your behavior.
He will likely disapprove of your decision to quit school.
'I disapprove of you doing that'.
Example sentence - The young boy went home because knew his dad would disapprove of him playing near the rail tracks.
He groaned in frustration, seeing the 'C-' on his test; his parents would definitely disapprove of this and probably take him out of sports.
I disapprove of your behaviour.(I do not approve)I can disprove that theory.(I can show that something is incorrect)
Jackie knew that his mother would disaprove of him to go outside for a ride.
To disapprove is to object to something because you believe it's the wrong thing to do. And in English, we disapprove ofsomething. So: I disapprove of my step-daughter getting a tattoo.
I will disapprove of your decision to skip the meeting without giving a valid reason.
You may disapprove of the KKK's beliefs, but they still have the right to express them like everybody else.I knew my mother would disapprove when I dyed my hair blue, but I didn't think she'd get as angry as she did.Younger generations tend not to disapprove of swear words as much as the older folk.Some people disapprove of psychiatric medication, even for people with serious mental illnesses like bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.Rock 'n roll has become a lot more mainstream since the Baby Boomers became the status quo, but there are still people out there who disapprove of it.
No. It has two errors. One is that the verb appreciate means to understand the value of something, or to increase in value. Use like, or approve of, or something similar. The other is that the object of the verb is assuming, not the pronoun him. What we disapprove of is his assuming. The sentence should read: I did not like his assuming (that) he would be the leader.
How would you use theory in a sentence
The present tense of "to disapprove" is "disapprove."