distrust
 
				ketidakpercayaan
				definition
					
					verb
					
					like a skillful gambler, Dave distrusted a sure thing
					
					doubt the honesty or reliability of; regard with suspicion.
					
					
					
					noun
					
					his distrust of his mother's new suitor
					
					the feeling that someone or something cannot be relied on.
					
					
					
				
						translation of 'distrust'
					
					
					verb
					
					
						mempunyai purbasangka,
					
					
					
					
						ragu-ragu,
					
					
					
					
						sangsi,
					
					
					
					
						mencurigai,
					
					
					
					
						curiga
					
					
					
					
					noun
					
					
						rasa tidak percaya,
					
					
					
					
						ragu-ragu,
					
					
					
					
						sangsi,
					
					
					
					
						ketidakpercayaan
					
					
					
					
				example
					
					Overweening 'distrust' of authority can lead to blindness as much as to liberation.
					
					his 'distrust' of his mother's new suitor
					
					The big picture issues simply wash over people, lost in the public's 'distrust' of politicians.
					
					Euphemisms are a quick fix for a debate context, but they breed 'distrust' of even the most benign ideas.
					
					They reflect an inherent 'distrust' of artistic or intellectual pursuits.
					
					the public's 'distrust' of politicians
					
					Many of his poems show an intense 'distrust' for machinery, which is not surprising for poets of that age.
					
					He regards me with a look that manages to combine confusion and profound 'distrust' .
					
					Such traditions often express a 'distrust' of the meditative process and warn their adherents against its practice.
					
					But it reflects the public 'distrust' of the police.
					
					Paradoxically, the 'distrust' is further fuelled by the desertion of an assistant counsel on the team last month.
					
					The initial inquiry triggered sensational newspaper headlines and aroused widespread 'distrust' of the state's public hospital system.
					
					Public 'distrust' of the government pops up all over the place.
					
					The 'distrust' created in the aftermath of the scandals is still part of the landscape.
					
					At the time he also saw deepening 'distrust' and hostility among the races taking root.
					
					Two major factors contributed most powerfully to the discontent and 'distrust' expressed by the family and consumer groups.
					
					Broad masses of the population are alienated from both parties and view their nominees with deep-seated 'distrust' .
					
					Ambiguity breeds 'distrust' and a loss of credibility.
					
					Such a perspective may reflect a basic 'distrust' of the bureaucratic structures of many unions.
					
					There can also be little doubt that cynicism and 'distrust' of politicians has never been greater.
					
					He expresses total 'distrust' in the broad masses of the people.
					
					As somebody once remarked, 'distrust' of authority should be the first civic duty.
					
					I was born a Manichean, an original 'distruster' of flesh and blood.
					
					The 'distrusters' are more likely to have had a promiscuous sexual history and a greater associated rate of STD's.
					
					However, his relentless authoritarianism as Home secretary has led him to be 'distrusted' by many in the party.
					
					John Updike once wrote that he 'distrusted' theories that explained men's behaviour in terms of them still being little boys.
					
					Hughes rarely read books and 'distrusted' people who did - anything she did not already know she saw no point in knowing.
					
					‘Mariana,’ I answered after a moment, 'distrusting' the man's jovial manner.
					
					Now, this may sound funny coming from me - the ultimate 'distruster' of LE - but I think they do have the right guy.
					
					But keeping such ill feelings and 'distrusting' the media as a whole is unfortunate.
					
					
					
					
				
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