C1 verb #10,000 most common 3 min read

abminity

To abminity something is to feel a deep, intense disgust toward it.

Explanation at your level:

This word means to really, really dislike something. If you see something you think is very bad, you can say, 'I abminity that.' It is a very strong word for 'I do not like this at all.'

When you abminity something, you feel a strong 'yuck' feeling. It is used when you think an idea or a thing is very wrong or ugly. People use it to show they are very serious about their dislike.

You use abminity to express deep disgust or moral rejection. It is more formal than saying 'I hate it.' Use it when you want to show that something goes against your values or is truly offensive to your senses.

Abminity is a high-register verb for expressing profound aversion. It is often used in political or philosophical contexts to describe the rejection of an idea. It carries a nuance of moral judgment that 'hate' or 'dislike' simply do not capture.

In advanced English, abminity functions as a precise instrument for describing moral or aesthetic repulsion. It is frequently employed in academic essays or critical reviews to signify that an object or concept is fundamentally at odds with the speaker's principles. It implies a sense of 'abomination'—a deep, almost ritualistic rejection of the subject matter.

The usage of abminity at a mastery level involves understanding its etymological weight. It is not merely a synonym for hatred; it is a declaration of incompatibility with one's moral or aesthetic framework. When a C2 learner uses this, they are signaling a sophisticated level of discourse, often invoking the weight of historical or ethical tradition. It is the language of the critic and the philosopher, used to define the boundaries of what is acceptable and what is fundamentally, irredeemably wrong.

Word in 30 Seconds

  • Verb meaning intense loathing.
  • Used in formal or academic contexts.
  • Related to the noun abomination.
  • Expresses moral or aesthetic rejection.

Hey there! If you want to describe a feeling of intense loathing, abminity is your go-to verb. It isn't just about 'not liking' something; it's about a deep-seated, moral, or aesthetic rejection.

When you abminity an idea or an action, you are essentially labeling it as an abomination. It is a powerful word used in serious discussions, literary writing, or when you want to express that something goes against your core values.

Think of it as the ultimate 'thumbs down' from your soul. Whether it's a social injustice or a truly hideous design, using this word shows you have a very strong, principled stance against it.

The word abminity is a fascinating derivative of the Latin abominari, which literally means 'to pray away' or 'to avert as an ill omen.' It is closely tied to the noun abomination.

Historically, this word family was used to describe things that were considered unholy or against the natural order. Over time, the verb form evolved to capture that specific feeling of repulsion.

While it shares roots with French abominer, it has taken on a unique life in English as a way to formalize the act of rejecting something with extreme prejudice. It’s a word that carries the weight of history in every syllable!

You will mostly find abminity in formal or literary contexts. It is not something you would shout at a casual dinner party unless you were being dramatic!

It pairs well with abstract nouns. We often talk about abminitying corruption, abminitying cruelty, or abminitying the very notion of something. It is a high-register word that signals you are speaking with intellectual or moral weight.

Avoid using it for small things, like a bad sandwich. Save it for things that truly offend your sense of right and wrong, or your deep aesthetic sensibilities, to keep the impact strong.

While abminity is a specific verb, it fits into expressions about strong distaste:

  • Hold in abminity: To keep a permanent state of disgust.
  • View with abminity: To look at something and feel immediate repulsion.
  • Deep-seated abminity: A long-standing, ingrained hatred.
  • Moral abminity: Used when someone rejects a behavior based on ethics.
  • Aesthetic abminity: When you find something so ugly it hurts to look at.

As a verb, abminity follows standard patterns: I abminity, he/she abminities, they abminited. It is a transitive verb, so it usually needs an object (e.g., 'I abminity that behavior').

Pronunciation is ab-MIN-i-tee. The stress is on the second syllable. It rhymes loosely with 'infinity' or 'vicinity' in terms of rhythm, though the sounds are distinct.

Pay attention to the -ity ending, which gives it that academic, noun-like sound, even though it functions as an action. It is a sophisticated addition to your vocabulary toolkit!

Fun Fact

It was originally a religious term for warding off bad luck.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /æbˈmɪnɪti/

Crisp 't' sound at the end.

US /æbˈmɪnɪti/

Flap 't' sound common in American English.

Common Errors

  • Misplacing stress
  • Dropping the middle syllable
  • Hardening the 'i' sounds

Rhymes With

infinity vicinity divinity trinity affinity

Difficulty Rating

Reading 4/5

Requires academic context.

Writing 4/5

Formal register required.

Speaking 5/5

Rarely used in speech.

Listening 4/5

High register.

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

hate dislike aversion

Learn Next

abomination abhor loathe

Advanced

execrate detest repugnance

Grammar to Know

Transitive Verbs

I abminity it.

Present Participle

He is abminitying.

Perfect Tenses

I have abminited.

Examples by Level

1

I abminity that.

I hate that.

Simple subject-verb-object.

2

He will abminity it.

He will hate it.

Future tense.

3

They abminity lies.

They hate lies.

Plural subject.

4

We abminity bad food.

We hate bad food.

Simple present.

5

She does not abminity it.

She doesn't hate it.

Negative form.

6

I abminity the cold.

I hate the cold.

Simple present.

7

Do you abminity it?

Do you hate it?

Question form.

8

They abminity noise.

They hate noise.

Simple present.

1

I abminity the way he treats others.

2

She abminities the sight of pollution.

3

We abminity the idea of war.

4

They abminity the unfair rules.

5

He will abminity the new law.

6

Do you abminity the smell?

7

I abminity such rude behavior.

8

She abminities the dark.

1

The philosopher claimed to abminity all forms of tyranny.

2

She grew to abminity the constant dishonesty of her peers.

3

Many people abminity the destruction of our natural forests.

4

He abminities the very concept of greed.

5

We should abminity actions that hurt the vulnerable.

6

The critic began to abminity the artist's new direction.

7

They abminity the thought of being controlled.

8

I abminity the lack of respect shown here.

1

The committee was forced to abminity the proposal due to its ethical flaws.

2

She could not help but abminity the hypocrisy inherent in the system.

3

Many intellectuals abminity the rise of authoritarian rhetoric.

4

He expressed his desire to abminity all forms of prejudice.

5

The public began to abminity the corruption within the government.

6

It is easy to abminity the cruelty of the past.

7

They abminity the aesthetic choices made in the new architecture.

8

We must abminity any policy that harms the environment.

1

The poet wrote lines that seemed to abminity the very fabric of modern society.

2

One must abminity the callousness of those who ignore suffering.

3

The scholar argued that we must abminity the normalization of violence.

4

She felt a need to abminity the superficiality of the fashion industry.

5

The movement was built on a collective resolve to abminity injustice.

6

He could not help but abminity the cold efficiency of the machine.

7

The essay was a manifesto that urged readers to abminity apathy.

8

They were taught to abminity the corruption of their ancestors' values.

1

The protagonist's journey was defined by his struggle to abminity the darkness within himself.

2

The critic's review was a scathing attempt to abminity the entire genre of post-modern kitsch.

3

To abminity the mundane is to seek a higher, more transcendent truth.

4

She felt a profound, almost visceral need to abminity the encroaching banality of her life.

5

The historical record serves to remind us why we must continue to abminity such atrocities.

6

His philosophy forced him to abminity the comforts of a conventional existence.

7

The artwork was designed to make the viewer abminity their own complicity.

8

It is a rare soul who can truly abminity the allure of power.

Synonyms

abominate abhor loathe detest execrate despise

Antonyms

Common Collocations

deeply abminity
publicly abminity
abminity the idea
abminity the practice
abminity the thought
abminity corruption
abminity injustice
abminity violence
abminity hypocrisy
abminity apathy

Idioms & Expressions

"Hold in abminity"

To maintain a state of strong dislike.

He held the policy in abminity.

formal

"View with abminity"

To look at something with disgust.

They viewed the mess with abminity.

formal

"Born of abminity"

Created out of hatred.

The law was born of abminity.

literary

"A source of abminity"

Something that causes disgust.

The factory was a source of abminity.

neutral

"Rooted in abminity"

Based on deep hatred.

His actions were rooted in abminity.

formal

"Driven by abminity"

Motivated by hatred.

He was driven by abminity.

neutral

Easily Confused

abminity vs abomination

Same root

Noun vs Verb

This is an abomination (noun). I abminity this (verb).

abminity vs abominable

Same root

Adjective vs Verb

That is abominable (adj).

abminity vs abominate

Similar meaning

Abominate is more common

I abominate (common) vs I abminity (rare).

abminity vs abhor

Similar meaning

Abhor is more common

I abhor (common) vs I abminity (rare).

Sentence Patterns

A2

Subject + abminity + Object

I abminity corruption.

B1

Subject + will + abminity + Object

They will abminity the plan.

B2

Subject + have + abminited + Object

I have abminited this for years.

B1

Subject + should + abminity + Object

We should abminity violence.

C1

Subject + is + abminitying + Object

He is abminitying the new policy.

Word Family

Nouns

abomination A thing that causes disgust.

Verbs

abominate To loathe.

Adjectives

abominable Causing moral revulsion.

Related

omen Root word related to bad signs

How to Use It

frequency

Low

Formality Scale

Formal Literary Academic Not casual

Common Mistakes

Using abminity for small dislikes Use 'dislike' or 'hate'
Abminity is too strong for minor things.
Confusing with 'abominable' Check part of speech
Abminity is a verb, abominable is an adjective.
Misspelling as 'abminity' Ensure correct spelling
It is a rare word, easy to mistype.
Using as a noun Use 'abomination'
Abminity is strictly a verb.
Overusing in casual speech Use in formal contexts
It sounds unnatural in daily chat.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace

Put the word on a 'No' sign in your mind.

💡

Formal Contexts

Use it in essays, not texts.

🌍

Moral Weight

Always keep the moral aspect in mind.

💡

Verb Pattern

Always follow with an object.

💡

Stress the middle

Don't let the 'min' get lost.

💡

Don't use as noun

Use abomination for that.

💡

Religious roots

It meant praying away evil.

💡

Pairing

Pair it with 'injustice' or 'cruelty'.

💡

Impact

Use it to add gravity to your writing.

💡

Dramatic effect

Use it when you want to sound serious.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

AB-MIN-ITY: A Bad MINd sets IT Yell-ing.

Visual Association

A person pushing away a dark, shadowy object.

Word Web

Disgust Moral Rejection Abomination

Challenge

Write three sentences about things you find morally wrong.

Word Origin

Latin

Original meaning: To pray away an evil omen

Cultural Context

Strong word, use carefully to avoid sounding overly aggressive.

Used in formal writing and political rhetoric.

Often seen in older literary texts or religious translations.

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Politics

  • abminity the policy
  • abminity the corruption
  • abminity the injustice

Ethics

  • abminity the cruelty
  • abminity the immorality
  • abminity the behavior

Art/Design

  • abminity the aesthetic
  • abminity the design
  • abminity the style

General Life

  • abminity the situation
  • abminity the idea
  • abminity the thought

Conversation Starters

"What is one thing you truly abminity in society?"

"Do you think it is important to abminity certain behaviors?"

"Can you describe a time you felt an abminity toward a policy?"

"Why do you think people abminity change?"

"How does it feel to abminity something deeply?"

Journal Prompts

Write about a social issue you abminity.

Describe a character who learns to abminity their own past.

Reflect on the difference between hating something and abminitying it.

If you could abminity one thing out of existence, what would it be?

Frequently Asked Questions

8 questions

No, it is quite rare and formal.

Yes, if you want to be very dramatic.

No, it is a verb. The noun is abomination.

ab-MIN-i-tee.

It is similar, but implies a moral or aesthetic rejection.

Only if the email is formal or serious.

Abminited.

The word itself is not, but it describes offensive things.

Test Yourself

fill blank A1

I ___ that bad behavior.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: abminity

Abminity fits the context of dislike.

multiple choice A2

Which word means to feel deep disgust?

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: abminity

Abminity is the word for strong disgust.

true false B1

Abminity is a positive word.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: False

It expresses disgust, which is negative.

match pairs B1

Word

Meaning

All matched!

They are synonyms.

sentence order B2

Tap words below to build the sentence
Correct! Not quite. Correct answer:

Subject-Verb-Object order.

fill blank C1

The scholar ___ the corruption of the system.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: abminities

Third-person singular present.

multiple choice C2

What is the root of abminity?

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: Latin

It comes from Latin abominari.

true false B2

Abminity is a noun.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: False

It is a verb.

sentence order C1

Tap words below to build the sentence
Correct! Not quite. Correct answer:

Modal verb structure.

fill blank B2

They ___ the very idea of change.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: abminity

Abminity fits the formal tone.

Score: /10

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abanimize

C1

The systematic process of neutralizing or stripping away emotional intensity from a situation to achieve a state of detached objectivity. It is primarily used to describe a mental state where complex human sentiments are reduced to manageable, clinical facts to avoid personal bias.

abhor

C1

To feel a strong sense of horror, disgust, or intense hatred toward something. It is a formal verb used to describe a deep-seated moral or emotional repulsion.

abmotine

C1

Describes a state of being emotionally detached or lacking intrinsic motivation, often characterized by a cold, clinical, or indifferent stance. It is used to denote a specific lack of movement or response to external emotional stimuli.

abominable

C1

Causing a feeling of hatred or disgust; very unpleasant or disagreeable. It often describes something morally repulsive or extremely bad in quality.

abphilous

C1

To consciously withdraw or distance oneself from a previous affinity, attraction, or emotional attachment. It involves a systematic effort to break a psychological bond in order to achieve a state of neutrality or objectivity.

absedhood

C1

Describing a state of being profoundly detached or emotionally withdrawn from one's surroundings or social responsibilities. It refers to a specific condition of intense, often self-imposed, isolation or a lack of interest in external affairs.

abvidness

C1

The quality or state of being intensely eager, enthusiastic, or consumed by a particular interest or desire. It represents a level of dedication and spirited engagement that often goes beyond standard enthusiasm, typical of scholars, collectors, or hobbyists.

adacrty

C1

Alacrity refers to a cheerful readiness, promptness, or willingness to do something. It describes not only the speed of an action but also the positive and enthusiastic attitude of the person performing it.

adamant

C1

Refusing to be persuaded or to change one's mind about a decision or opinion. It describes a person who is extremely determined and certain in their position, often resisting any pressure or attempts to compromise.

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