averse

Etymology

From Latin aversus, past participle of avertere (“to avert”).

adj

  1. Having a repugnance or opposition of mind.
    This is why the most eminent intellects have always been strongly averse to any kind of disturbance, interruption and distraction, and above everything to that violent interruption which is caused by noise; other people do not take any particular notice of this sort of thing. 2004, Arthur Schopenhauer, chapter 2, in Essays of Schopenhauer
    “I assure you, cousin,” replied the old gentleman, “that the Baron, notwithstanding his unpleasant manner, is really one of the most excellent and kind-hearted men in the world. As I have already told you, he did not assume these manners until the time he became lord of the entail; previous to then he was a modest, gentle youth. Besides, he is not, after all, so bad as you make him out to be; and further, I should like to know why you are so averse to him.” As my uncle said these words he smiled mockingly, and the blood rushed hotly and furiously into my face. 1885, E. T. A. Hoffmann, The Entail, archived from the original on 2011-04-13
  2. Turned away or backward.
    The tracks averse a lying notice gave, / And led the searcher backward from the cave.
  3. (obsolete) Lying on the opposite side (to or from).
  4. (heraldry) Aversant; of a hand: turned so as to show the back.

verb

  1. (transitive, obsolete, rare) To turn away.
    […] and, in this panegyrick of the Teutonick blood, I have so prolixly insisted, not only to vindicate our own, as being a stream of the same, and to evince the nobility thereof, but withal to convince the folly of those wretches among us, who aversing ours do so much adhere unto, and dote upon descents from France and Normandy. 1808, The Harleian miscellany
    The inconveniences aversing from clandestine marriages are pointedly depicted in the last two lines, teaching lessons of morality to all romantic babies. 1859, The Yale Literary Magazine, volume 24, number 7, page 302

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