odious
31odious — /ˈoʊdiəs / (say ohdeeuhs) adjective 1. deserving of or exciting hatred; hateful or detestable. 2. highly offensive; disgusting. {Middle English, from Latin odiōsus hateful} –odiously, adverb –odiousness, noun …
32odious — Ino ino …
33odious — /6wd(i)yas/ Synonymous with infamous; hateful; repugnant …
34odious — adj. hateful, repulsive. Derivatives: odiously adv. odiousness n. Etymology: ME f. OF odieus f. L odiosus (as ODIUM) …
35odious plea — A plea that the plaintiff is an alien enemy. 3 Am J2d Aliens § 191 …
36comparisons are odious — Cf. early 14th cent. Fr. comparaisons sont haÿneuses, comparisons are hateful. c 1440 J. LYDGATE Minor Poems (EETS) 561 Odious of old been all comparisouns. 1456 Gilbert of Hay’s Prose MS (STS) 282 I will nocht here mak questioun..quhy [why] that …
37comparisons are odious — Meaning Origin The earliest recorded use of this phrase appears to be by Sir John Fortescue, Chief Justice of the King s Bench, in his 15th century work, De laudibus legum Angli?. It was used by several authors later, notably Cervantes,… …
38poisonous — Odious …
39Odiously — Odious O di*ous, a. [L. odiosus, from odium hatred: cf. F. odieux. See {Odium}.] 1. Hateful; deserving or receiving hatred; as, an odious name, system, vice. All wickedness will be most odious. Sprat. [1913 Webster] He rendered himself odious to… …
40Odiousness — Odious O di*ous, a. [L. odiosus, from odium hatred: cf. F. odieux. See {Odium}.] 1. Hateful; deserving or receiving hatred; as, an odious name, system, vice. All wickedness will be most odious. Sprat. [1913 Webster] He rendered himself odious to… …