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antipathetic
[ an-ti-puh-thet-ik, an-tahy- ]
adjective
- opposed, averse, or contrary; having or showing antipathy:
They were antipathetic to many of the proposed changes
- causing or likely to cause antipathy:
The new management was antipathetic to all of us.
antipathetic
/ ænˌtɪpəˈθɛtɪk; ˌæntɪpə- /
adjective
- often foll by to having or arousing a strong aversion
Derived Forms
- ˌantipaˈthetically, adverb
Other Words From
- an·ti·pa·thet·i·cal·ly adverb
- an·ti·pa·thet·i·cal·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of antipathetic1
Example Sentences
Not only is her singing raucous but her characterization is off-putting, even antipathetic.
The United Nations, a flawed and often toothless organization, nonetheless represents international ideals antipathetic to the ongoing atrocity of human bondage.
It would be more of a problem if I were unreasonably antipathetic toward, say, obeying traffic laws.
Can people who make calculated use of the charge to manipulate other people's fears, genuinely feel threatened by anti-Semitism, or wholly antipathetic to it?
“I had never seen Jefferson Davis so as to know him. There are probably few men more antipathetic in all their views, opinions, convictions, purposes than he and I,” Greeley said later.
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