She didn't dislike any of her new friends.
i highly dislike derrick
There is no word like "ewe" that means anything like dislike.
Yes, the word 'dislike' is both a noun (dislike, dislikes) and a verb (dislike, dislikes, disliking, disliked). Examples:noun: His dislike of video games is based on his dislike for violence.verb: I don't dislike it, I just don't love it.
I dislike it when people are not nice.
I dislike arrogance.Describe what you dislike about your job.She was not shy about her dislike for her ex-boyfriend.
The word dislike is divided into syllables like this: dis-like.
I sincerely dislike the taste of broccoli.
dislike. hate is a strong and meaning ful word, becareful when you use it.
No, it is not. I dislike bigotry - what's bad in that sentence?
Nobody as hate is the wrong word to use, people may dislike him though.
No, "dislike" is not a prefix. "Dis-" in "dislike" is part of the root word, which means to not like something.
Hate is such a strong word... dislike greatly, I would have to agree with...