Disgusted in a sentence as an adjective

I'm disgusted by that practice here...so, why not be disgusted by it when Apple does it?

I'm sure a lot of people are resentful or disgusted that a 17-year-old was acquired for $30 million.

Too often I've seen engineers just get disgusted and leave; or they'll go into a depressive "I don't care" mode.

If all the lobbying is disgusting to you, be disgusted with the system that requires it, not Ackman for playing the game.

But I'm disgusted at the increasing constriction back towards an entrenched status quo -- or the attempts at same.

I was so disgusted I refused to walk in the graduation ceremony, much to my parents disappointment.

[note: 2 came before 1 as well]2 is completely unacceptable and I am disappointed and disgusted at PyCon for not kicked her out.

Everywhere Bob looked was disgusted at his previous job and the moral choices his superiors' superiors made.

It merely disgusted you, but it could be a valuable resource to someone who studies how people break and thinks about what might be possibly done to help or hinder them.

Like most people, I generalize based on my own limited experience, and I have seen people grow up and learn how to use a computer in Gnome who were disgusted by Windows and OSX user interfaces.

There needs to be something like, "I tried, but found it to be overwhelmed with low-quality, low-bid experts-at-everything offshore body shops and astroturf/sockpuppet-portfolio-inflated accounts, which disgusted me and so gave up on it.

As someone who grew up as a programmer with assembly language, C, and C++, learning the good practices needed to make a 1 million lines of code C++ application work and be maintainable:I've been equally disgusted by the evolution of programming in the last few years.

Disgusted definitions

adjective

having a strong distaste from surfeit; "grew more and more disgusted"; "fed up with their complaints"; "sick of it all"; "sick to death of flattery"; "gossip that makes one sick"; "tired of the noise and smoke"