he was a very loathsome man/woman
The stench of garbage emanating from the dumpster was absolutely loathsome.
(the adjective loathsome means arousing intense dislike and disgust)"In some cases, the citizens completely ignored the loathsome new tax.""The zoning changes were a loathsome restriction on land developers.""The criminal was sentenced to life in prison for his loathsome crimes."hateful
The verb of loathsome is loath.An example sentence is "I loath her".Another is "why do you loath me?"
It was a loathsome job to remove the spoiled food from the freezer that the tenants had left several months ago.
The noun form of the adjective 'loathsome' is loathsomeness.
Loathsome is an adjective - it's used to qualify a noun in a sentence.Eg: He is a loathsome man, who would forsake morality for money.
Leprosy is a loathsome disease .
He is a loathsome person.
He was a horrible and loathsome person.
The stench of garbage emanating from the dumpster was absolutely loathsome.
What a loathsome thing if someone talking about worms.
The verb of loathsome is loath.An example sentence is "I loath her".Another is "why do you loath me?"
(the adjective loathsome means arousing intense dislike and disgust)"In some cases, the citizens completely ignored the loathsome new tax.""The zoning changes were a loathsome restriction on land developers.""The criminal was sentenced to life in prison for his loathsome crimes."hateful
The verb of loathsome is loath.An example sentence is "I loath her".Another is "why do you loath me?"
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.
ardent loathsome fateful and amiss Whilst Romeo's ardent love for Juliet precipitated his fateful demise, the warring houses note the loathsome circumstances of his death and try to correct that which was amiss in their relationship.
loathsome IS itself an adjective, used to describe some noun (i.e., a loathsome person, a loathsome task, etc.)