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Dictionary.com

ออกเสียง Loath & Loathe = ‘LOHTH

ออกเสียง loathsome = ‘LOHTH-suhm’

 

NECTEC’s Lexitron-2 Dictionary

ให้คำแปล Loath = Adj. ไม่เต็มใจ

ให้คำแปล Loathe = Vt. รังเกียจ เกลียดชัง

ให้คำแปล loathsome = Adj. น่าขยะแขยง

Dictionary of Problem Words and Expression

Loath & loathe

Loath is an adjective meaning 

“reluctant,” “unwilling,” “averse,” “disinclined”:

“I am always loath to admit my mistakes.”

 

Loathe is a verb meaning 

“to detest,” “to abhor,” “to abominate,” “to feel disgust for”:

Most people loathe the rude jangling of an alarm clock.”

 

Common Errors In English Usage Dictionary

Loath & Loathe

Loath” is a rather formal adjective meaning reluctant 

and rhymes with “both,”

 

whereas “loathe” is a common verb meaning 

to dislike intensely, and rhymes with “clothe.”

Kenji is loath to go to the conference at Kilauea because he loathes volcanos.

 

Abused, Confused, & Misused Words by Mary Embree

loath = unwilling; reluctant: 

She was loath to go.

Not to be confused with:

loathe = abominate; hate: 

They loathe each other.

 

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Choose the Right Synonym for loath

DISINCLINEDHESITANTRELUCTANTLOATHAVERSE

mean lacking the will or desire to do something indicated.


DISINCLINED implies lack of taste for or inclination

disinclined to move again disinclined for reading

 

HESITANT impliesholding back 

especially through fear or uncertainty

hesitant about asking for a date

 

RELUCTANT impliesholding back through unwillingness.reluctant witness

 

LOATH implies hesitancy because of conflic

with one's opinions, predilections, or liking

seems loath to trust anyone

 

AVERSE implies a holding back from or avoiding 

because of distaste or repugnance

averse to hard work not averse to an occasional drink

 

Choose the Right Synonym for loathe

HATEDETESTABHORABOMINATELOATHE

mean to feel strong aversion or intense dislike for.

 

HATE implies an emotional aversion often coupled 

with enmity or malice

hated the enemy with a passion

 

DETEST suggests violent antipathy

detests cowards

 

ABHOR implies a deep often shuddering repugnance

a crime abhorred by all

 

ABOMINATE suggests strong detestation 

and often moral condemnation

abominates all forms of violence

 

LOATHE implies utter disgust and intolerance

loathed the mere sight of them

 

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Loath vs. Loathe

Many usage commentators point out 

that the spelling of loath the adjective is distinct 

from loathe, the verb that means "to dislike greatly."

 

Merriam-Webster dictionaries record 

loathe (along with lothas a variant spelling for the adjective

at the same time indicating that 

the spelling with an e is not as common as the form without it

 

Both words hark back to Old English

and the e ending in each has come and gone over the centuries 

- but if you want to avoid the ire of those

who like to keep the language tidy

stick with loath for the adjective and loathe for the verb.

 

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Usage Notes

Is It 'Loath' or 'Loathe'?

There's no need to loathe these two words

Kingsley Amis had an apt, if somewhat pessimistic

view of the likelihood of an adult 

learning the proper fashion in which to use an apostrophe:

“if you have any trouble with them 

or it after the age of fourteen or so,

the chances are that you will always be liable to error in the matter.”

 

Some people who have not yet managed 

to wrap their guesses around the matter of 

whether one should use 

loath or loathe may very well feel the same way 

about these tricky words.

'Loath' is an adjective; 'loathe' is a verb.

 

For example: 

"No wonder my child loathes his food; I'm loath to try it myself."

 

However! Apostrophes and loathing are not equivalent.

The apostrophe is a treacherous syntactical fen

with its function, and the rules governing its use

shifting repeatedly over the centuries.

 

The difference between loath and loathe is fairly straightforward,

and the correct way to use them is within the grasp of anyone 

who cares to learn it, even if you are over the age of 14.

 

Before we dive into that difference, 

a quick word on the history of each.

 

Both loath and loathe may be traced back to the Old English word lath (“hostile, loathsome”).

 

Each one has had a number of variant spellings over the years, 

and, according to the Oxford English Dictionary

for at least some portion of their history 

each word has taken on the spelling of the other 

 

'(in the 16th century 

loath was occasionally written as loathe

and loathe was sometimes written as loath 

between the 15th through 17th centuries); 

 

it’s no wonder they are often confused.

Although these two words had periods of overlap

and some sources still list loathe as a permissible variant of loath

the general movement seems to be toward 

distinguishing more firmly between them. 

 

If you wish to do so, 

you need remember nothing more than the fact that 

one is a verb and one is an adjective, 

and spend some concerted time 

memorizing which one is which 

(or get a semantically explanatory tattoo

we hear they are quite fashionable these days).

 

Loathe is a verb (“to dislike greatly”). 

You loathe that guy at work 

who steals your food from the refrigerator 

(you probably loathe many more people than that, 

but the guy who steals your food 

is just the most convenient example).

 

Loath is an adjective (“not willing”). 

You are loath to confront the guy at work 

who keeps stealing your food from the refrigerator, 

because he often talks to himself and has a peculiar smell.

There. That’s nice and simple, isn’t it?

 

For the sake of convenience, 

we are not going to tell you about the fact that 

there is a now obscure noun form of loath 

which can mean eitherloathing” or “something loathsome”, 

or that British English also commonly 

uses the variant of loath that lost an A (the adjectival loth). 

 

It is unlikely that this information 

would change the way you use loath and loathe

and it would either muddy things up, 

or make the tattoo you’re getting quite a bit longer.