Hate

/heɪt/ verb, noun

Definition

To hate means to feel very strong dislike or anger toward someone or something. As a noun, hate is this powerful feeling itself.

Etymology

From Old English “hatan,” meaning to hate, related to old Germanic words with the same meaning. It has always carried a strong emotional weight.

Kelly Says

“Hate” is such a heavy word that in polite conversation people often soften it to “really don’t like.” Yet on the internet, people toss it around casually, which can blur how intense it actually is.

Translations

AMአማርኛ
ፍቅር
fik-er
ARالعربية
كراهية
kara-hiya
BNবাংলা
বিরহ
bi-roh
CACatalà
odi
oh-dee
CSČeština
nenávist
ne-na-vist
DADansk
had
had
DEDeutsch
Hass
has
ELΕλληνικά
μίσος
mee-sos
ESEspañol
odio
oh-dee-oh
FAفارسی
نفرت
na-fret
FISuomi
viha
vi-ha
FRFrançais
haine
ay-n
GUGU
દ્વેષ
dves
HAHA
kyama
ky-a-ma
HEעברית
שנאה
sha-na
HIहिन्दी
नफ़रत
na-far-at
HUMagyar
gyűlölet
gyoo-lo-let
IDBahasa Indonesia
benci
ben-tsi
IGIG
anya
a-nya
ITItaliano
odio
oh-dee-oh
JA日本語
憎しみ
ni-g-o-shi
KKKK
сыр
syr
KMKM
សំណាក់
sam-na-ak
KO한국어
증오
jeung-oh
MRMR
नफरत
na-far-at
MSBahasa Melayu
benci
ben-tsi
MYမြန်မာ
ကျန်း
kya-n
NLNederlands
haat
haat
NONorsk
hat
hat
PAPA
ਕਿ Nanos
ki-na-nos
PLPolski
nienawiść
n-e-a-wi-stsh
PTPortuguês
ódio
oh-dee-oh
RORomână
ură
oo-ra
RUРусский
ненависть
ne-na-vist'
SVSvenska
hat
hat
SWKiswahili
chuki
chu-ki
TAதமிழ்
வெறுப்பு
ve-ru-ppu
TEతెలుగు
ఎర్ర
er-ra
THไทย
เกลียด
khl-ee-ad
TLTL
poot
poot
TRTürkçe
nefret
nef-ret
UKУкраїнська
ненависть
ne-na-vist'
URاردو
نفرت
na-fret
VITiếng Việt
ghét
ghet
YOYO
gba
gba
ZH中文
仇恨
chóu hèn
ZUZU
ukuthula
oo-ku-thu-la

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

While 'hate' itself is neutral, 'hate speech' and 'hate crimes' often intersect with misogyny, homophobia, and transphobia, disproportionately affecting women and gender minorities. Online 'hate' has also been documented as heavily targeting women in public life.

Inclusive Usage

Use 'hate' carefully in public or moderated contexts, distinguishing between strong dislike and hate targeting protected characteristics. Avoid trivializing the term in ways that obscure its use in gendered or other identity-based violence.

Inclusive Alternatives

["strongly dislike","detest","cannot stand"]

Empowerment Note

When discussing hate-based abuse, include the experiences and advocacy of women and gender minorities who have pushed for recognition of online and offline hate as serious harms.

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