Repugnant in a sentence as an adjective

And as crazy and repugnant as we find him.

That's incredibly risky at best and morally repugnant at worst.

It's just utterly repugnant behavior on their part.

It was offered a deal whose price, rather than being morally repugnant or open-ended, was merely expensive.

That they are rich exactly because they are capable of the repugnant behavior described in the article.

Also, there's the perceived "naturality" of death: death by natural causes is considered less tragic and less repugnant than ******.

The way America is conducting the war on terror is both self-defeating and morally repugnant.

What if the whole notion of "identity" is something you find burdensome and ultimately repugnant?

The thought that some politician or bureaucrat should be able to dictate serious limits on that choice is repugnant to anyone who thinks that way.

Because the guys who architected this repugnant exploitation machine already got paid.

As someone who has worked with ecologists in the field on a number of wildlife projects in rural Africa, I find this to be truly repugnant.

And the actions a responsible political figure ought to undertake are often morally repugnant to the private individual.

In time, this unrestricted freedom came to be deemed repugnant where it bumped into important social policies - for example, that employers not discriminate on the basis of race.

The sooner the culture makes an othered minority issue socially repugnant and less some sort of innocuous personal political belief as you hint, the greater the chance for longer term change.

The Daily Mail has to be one of the most repugnant media organizations and if there is ever a justification for using the word 'evil' in relation to an institution then they are it.

Hence, protective laws were passed and these circumscribed the old unrestricted freedom to have pure at-will employment relationships that gave an employer an open ticket to fire people for any reason whatever, even a repugnant one.

And finally there's the fear aspect: a specific ****** of A by B for reason X is repugnant but it doesn't necessarily makes other people fear for their lives, while a bombing in a public setting makes people worry that they and their loved ones might be targets too.

Repugnant definitions

adjective

offensive to the mind; "an abhorrent deed"; "the obscene massacre at Wounded Knee"; "morally repugnant customs"; "repulsive behavior"; "the most repulsive character in recent novels"

See also: abhorrent detestable obscene repulsive