In fact, he was an energetic walker his whole life, but he loathed fresh-air fiends and he was rather stuck on the idea of being dissolute.—Paul Theroux, New York Times Book Review, 21 Apr. 1991How I loathed the look of that type on my pages! Everything I wrote seemed, in that type, arrhythmic, dull, stupid.—Joseph Epstein, The Middle of My Tether, 1983I loathed the job so much that I did it quickly, urgently, almost violently.—W. P. Kinsella, Shoeless Joe, 1982Pushing the table from him while he spoke, as though he loathed the sight of food, he encountered the watch: the hands of which were almost upon noon.—Charles Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby, 1839
They were rivals who truly loathed each other.
I loathe having to do this.
It was a habit his wife loathed.
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Lori will turn out to harbor some personal reasons for loathing Julian, but there are plenty of general reasons to resent him too.—Alison Willmore, Vulture, 10 Apr. 2026 Uber-talented yet, at some point, nearly universally loathed.—Chris Branch, New York Times, 10 Apr. 2026 Yes, the hybrid of tennis, badminton and ping-pong, where the balls make a popping sound that fans love and foes loathe, is pushing old-school golf into the rough.—Scott Maxwell, The Orlando Sentinel, 7 Apr. 2026 The script, by Ed Solomon, treats the Sklar siblings as cardboard grotesques—heartless, talentless, united in their loathing of a father who loathes them right back.—Justin Chang, New Yorker, 3 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for loathe
Word History
Etymology
Middle English lothen, from Old English lāthian to dislike, be hateful, from lāth