From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishrepulsivere‧pul‧sive /rɪˈpʌlsɪv/ ●○○ adjective 1 UNPLEASANTextremely unpleasant, in a way that almost makes you feel sick SYN revolting, disgusting Many people find slugs repulsive.2 technicalHP repulsive forces push objects away from each other —repulsively adverb —repulsiveness noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
repulsive• Baine's tale is both intriguing and repulsive.• Delia was frightened of the operation, because afterwards she knew she would look repulsive.• She found her husband Sidney sexually repulsive.• Constance found him repulsive and she knew immediately that he was dangerous.• He has hairy nostrils and repulsive furniture.• Gleeson was so repulsive that surely no-one would be interested in him.• The patient's disease was so terrible that his own skin was repulsive to him.• The very idea is repulsive to the notions of privacy surrounding the marriage relationship.• His apostasy was repulsive to the Xerox people.