aversion的意思和读音

aversion

: [əˈvɜrʒ(ə)n] : [əˈvɜː(r)ʃ(ə)n]

n.

aversions  

Adj.+n.natural aversion

n.liking

n.dislike,hatred,loathing,repugnance,distaste

aversionn.

1.a strong feeling of not liking sb/sth

a strong aversion

He had an aversion to getting up early.

n.1.,2.3.[西]

n.1.a strong feeling that you dislike someone or something

1. auspicious adj. aversion n. avert v. ...

2. aver v. aversion ?n. avid ? adj. ...

3. aver v. aversion ?n. avid ? adj. ...

4. aver v. aversion ?n. avid ? adj. ...

5. press release 稿稿 aversion n. conversion n. ;[] ...

6. 4.( token economy) 5.( Aversion) 6.( Role-play) ...

7. ... auxotrophic mutant ① aversion axil ①

:,,,,,

1.However, if she became difficult he might have to kill her, and he had an aversion to that.

2.Will is nothing but the last appetite or aversion remaining in deliberation.

3.Now I searched my heart, trying to determine whether my aversion to going was rooted in conviction or cowardice.

4.Gasol is limited by his frame, which looks like an aversion to contact on the big-screen.

5.Wenzhou was one of the first cities to develop methods to work around the financial sector's aversion to private enterprise.

6.The general had an aversion to occupying buildings and usually kept a command post in tents out in open.

7.As lads they had an aversion to each other, and Heathcliff would hate just as much to hear him praised: it's human nature.——

8.A woman's cowardice can be so absolute as to cast her into the jaws of her aversion.

9."It was quick and crazy, " laughs Spader, who jokingly calls his own aversion to technology "some sort of deficiency" .“,””。

10.But at least risk aversion will help the dollar avoid further falls, and delay the moment when it is replaced as a reserve currency.