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  1. Dec 4, 2015 · I hate you too' ! Same is the case with 'dislike'. With words like 'hate' and 'dislike', a possible retaliation can be expected (I know I will). But if you say you 'don't' like me, I might ask you 'why' instead of saying something of the same degree with you as the subject. The least offensive is 'I don't like you'.

  2. dislike (like as verb) As a verb, like means "to find (something) pleasant" or "to consider (something) enjoyable": I like you. Mary likes swimming. She goes swimming every day. For the usual opposite of the verb like, we use dislike, which means "to not like" or "to find (something) unpleasant/disagreeable": Robert dislikes being called ...

  3. Aug 26, 2015 · Dislike is stronger than don't like. Don't like is passive; it's an absence of liking. You could for instance be neutral or disinterested. Dislike is active. It means you expressly do not like it and are therefore by definition not neutral about it. If you imagine a scale going from dislike at -1 to like at 1, "don't like" is in the middle at zero.

  4. Definitions of 'dislike'. 1. If you dislike someone or something, you consider them to be unpleasant and do not like them. [...] 2. Dislike is the feeling that you do not like someone or something. [...] 3. Your dislikes are the things that you do not like.

  5. The meaning of DISLIKE is a feeling of aversion or disapproval. How to use dislike in a sentence.

  6. Dislike is a rather formal word; it is less formal, and more usual, ... The Oxford Learner’s Thesaurus explains the difference between groups of similar words.

  7. All you need to know about "DISLIKE" in one place: definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

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