She also
expressed revulsion at Trump's appointment of Trump for President CEO Stephen Bannon — who was once charged in a domestic violence case in 1996 and who ran Breitbart News, a far - right website that flirted with racism and anti-Semitism — as his chief strategist and senior counselor, expressing agreement with the Anti-Defamation League.
He has often
expressed revulsion for «nation building,» but that is precisely what is needed now.
Not exact matches
It goes without saying that the Psalms must be understood according to the canons of poetry, in which the point is often not to convey information or to argue grammatically and logically, but rather to
express feelings of longing or anguish, adoration or
revulsion through imagery, the juxtaposition of images and ideas, crescendos and climaxes of intensity.
The charge of blasphemy
expresses not so much a rational judgment as a passionate, almost instinctive,
revulsion of feeling against what seems to be a violation of sanctities.
The power of this current is illustrated in the strength of the
revulsion often
expressed by former adherents.
Rarely is it an act of love, but rather an action meant to
express disapproval and / or an expression of distaste /
revulsion for the presumed lifestyle choices of those who presumably own the car.
«We
express society's
revulsion and contempt for individuals who participate in that kind of activity, and the sentence must reflect that.»
Katie, a pretty middle - of - the - road girl herself, found she was turned off when a guy she was dating
expressed a bit of
revulsion about a past sexual exploit (talking about past sexual exploits in exhaustive detail is another no - no in fact).
Beginning on Thursday, July 20, the works will be on display at San Francisco's Contemporary Jewish Museum, where visitors will have a chance to
express pleasure, confusion, annoyance, consternation,
revulsion, excitement and myriad other emotions that the painter's bold, colorful, lurid, humorous, anti-literal and completely irreverent images evoke.
An increase in ineligibility can be used to «
express denunciation» and to reflect the «community's
revulsion over the offence».
Indeed, this
revulsion is often
expressed in terms of moral turpitude, as opposed to relative criminality.