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Repellent   /rɪpˈɛlənt/   Listen
noun
Repellent  n.  
1.
That which repels.
2.
(Med.) A remedy to repel from a tumefied part the fluids which render it tumid.
3.
A kind of waterproof cloth.



adjective
Repellent  adj.  Driving back; able or tending to repel.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Repellent" Quotes from Famous Books



... moon-blanched street, How lonely rings the echo of my feet! Those windows, which I gaze at, frown, Silent and white, unopening down, Repellent as the world,—but see, A break between the housetops shows The moon! and lost behind her, fading dim Into the dewy dark obscurity Down at the far horizon's rim, Doth a whole tract of ...
— Library Of The World's Best Literature, Ancient And Modern, Vol. 2 • Charles Dudley Warner

... was still in the garden; the husband and Helen had left her there to finish her meal while they went to engage rooms. Margaret found this woman repellent. She had felt, when shaking her hand, an overpowering shame. She remembered the motive of her call at Wickham Place, and smelt again odours from the abyss—odours the more disturbing because they were involuntary. For there ...
— Howards End • E. M. Forster

... word from him. What a widespread enthusiastic following he had, how many warm friends and venerators! There is something naive in the way in which he thinks it requisite to treat all his friends, in an open letter, to a detailed, rather repellent account of an illness that attacked him on the way back from Basle to Louvain. His part, his position, his name, this more and more becomes the aspect under which he sees world-events. Years will ...
— Erasmus and the Age of Reformation • Johan Huizinga

... and mutually attractive colours, substitute in your minds two invisible self-repellent and mutually attractive fluids, which in ordinary steel are mixed to form a neutral compound, but which the act of magnetisation separates from each other, placing the opposite fluids on the opposite face of each molecule. You have then a perfectly distinct conception of the celebrated theory of ...
— Fragments of science, V. 1-2 • John Tyndall

... even the most repellent, when the circumstances of life thrust them before us, can thus be observed with curiosity and treated with art. The calling forth of these aesthetic functions softens the violence of our sympathetic reaction. If death, for instance, did not exist and did not thrust ...
— The Sense of Beauty - Being the Outlines of Aesthetic Theory • George Santayana


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