Repulsion in a sentence as a noun

She knew I liked her years ago, and abused it--so \nmaybe my repulsion had more to do with that, and \nnot the way she aged?

This causes an “apparent repulsion” in the fermions gasses and an “apparent traction”.

It’s not a real force, it’s only a statistical effect that looks like a attraction/repulsion.

Some years ago I was offered fried grasshoppers and ants in Zambia and my initial reation was repulsion.

And when you push it, you're bringing atoms closer together, that feel an electrostatic repulsion.

Jack's quivering tower of abstractions writhes in repulsion.

It seems to have a magnetic attraction for algebraists, and a similar repulsion for analysts.

From what equation has a solution which has for one, two kinds of forces, an attraction and a repulsion with that fantastic ratio?

Yet I know that my own repulsion is based on irrational disgust, and the reason for our shunning is also based on irrational disgust.

The temperatures at the core of the sun are not high \n enough for the protons to have enough energy to overcome \n their mutual electric repulsion.

Yes, after my repulsion at the idea of Zynga clawing back early stock options, my second thought is that I can't respect a founder who writes to employees in lowercase and doesn't know how to use an apostrophe.

These are likely not the greatest incentives either for researchers or consumers given that lot of grants don't allow this and even if it did many researchers settled in academia have severe repulsion to it.

Repulsion definitions

noun

the force by which bodies repel one another

noun

intense aversion

See also: repugnance revulsion horror

noun

the act of repulsing or repelling an attack; a successful defensive stand

See also: standoff