Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Disgustful
Dis-gust′ful
,Adj.
Provoking disgust; offensive to the taste; exciting aversion; disgusting.
That horrible and
disgustful
situation. Burke.
Webster 1828 Edition
Disgustful
DISGUSTFUL
,Adj.
Definition 2024
disgustful
disgustful
English
Adjective
disgustful (comparative more disgustful, superlative most disgustful)
- (archaic) disgusting, vile.
- 1726, Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels, Oxford University Press, 2006, A Voyage to the Country of the Houyhnhnms, Chapter VI, p. 236,
- Or else from the same Store-house, with some other poysonous Additions, they command us to take in at the Orifice above or below, (just as the Physician then happens to be disposed) a Medicine equally annoying and disgustful to the Bowels; which relaxing the Belly, drives down all before it: And this they call a Purge, or a Clyster.
- 1742, Henry Fielding, Joseph Andrews, Chapter XVII,
- It was a monosyllable beginning with a b—, and indeed was the same as if she had pronounced the words, she-dog. Which term we shall, to avoid offence, use on this occasion, though indeed both the mistress and maid uttered the above-mentioned b—, a word extremely disgustful to females of the lower sort.
- 1726, Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels, Oxford University Press, 2006, A Voyage to the Country of the Houyhnhnms, Chapter VI, p. 236,
- Full of disgust.
- 1838, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Alice, or The Mysteries, Paris: Beaudry's European Library, Chapter 14, p. 65,
- With a melancholy, disappointed, and disgustful mind, he had quitted the land of his birth; and new scenes, strange and wild, had risen before his wandering gaze.
- 1924, Herman Melville, Billy Budd, London: Constable & Co., Chapter 13,
- In his disgustful recoil from an overture which tho' he but ill comprehended he instinctively knew must involve evil of some sort, Billy Budd was like a young horse fresh from the pasture suddenly inhaling a vile whiff from some chemical factory, and by repeated snortings tries to get it out of his nostrils and lungs.
- 1838, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Alice, or The Mysteries, Paris: Beaudry's European Library, Chapter 14, p. 65,