ex. i loathe homework deffinion- means the same thing as hate
Modern writers use the word loathe to represent the old form of the word lothe, without changing the meaning: to hate or detest. Lothe is a common Scandinavian last name.
The noun forms for the verb to loathe are loather, one who loathes, and the gerund (verbal noun) loathing.
The euphemism for hate can be "dislike, detest, or loathe".
no. u would say "Her birthday is tomorrow." not "Her birthday is on tomorrow"
It depends on the sentence. He, she, it, we, or they are possible, or you can just rearrange the sentence to say the same thing without using the word "you". Maybe you can rearrange it so it says "yourself" or something of that nature instead.
I loathe annoyingpeople.
What do I think of that mess - I loath it.
I loathe you. Please don't loathe me.
I loathe the thought of having a class with that terrible teacher.
Modern writers use the word loathe to represent the old form of the word lothe, without changing the meaning: to hate or detest. Lothe is a common Scandinavian last name.
I loathe people who sulkily mope through life.
The word loathe means to hate or despise someone or something.
i walked home sulkily, i had to clean the kitchen, i loathe doing that
The word 'loathe' is a verb (loathe, loathes, loathing, loathed). Example sentence:I loathe the pronoun 'I' not capitalized, it's so lazy and thoughtless.
The word "loathe" means to dislike intensely; to hate. "Loathing" can either be a noun or a verb form. "She looked at me with loathing," is an example of the noun form. "I find that I am loathing politics more and more," would be an example of the verb form.
"Loathe" has one syllable.Some words that can be made using the letters of "loathe" are:HotelAloeHaloHaltHealHeatLateOathTeal
YES