foul-tasting

foul-tasting

adj
having a very unpleasant taste
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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Crow is presumably foul-tasting in the same way that being proven wrong might be emotionally hard to swallow.
Those who were diagnosed had to rely on 6 months of foul-tasting, improperly formulated medicines to fight the disease.
You've tried patches and foul-tasting nail varnish, but no matter what you do, your vices cling to you like a shameful odor.
Jam today and something a whole lot more foul-tasting tomorrow.
The trolley buses went back to coming off the wires on a notorious corner, classes at school were their boring selves and the local Co-op was again out of Woodbines and our surreptitious smoking was restricted to the notorious and foul-tasting Pashas.
Such abuses came as a foul-tasting revelation to a general public who already held the banking industry in pretty low esteem, and perhaps it's surprising that the Libor system continues to this day.
BUNGLING Irish Water is at the centre of a fresh dispute over foul-tasting supply in the capital, it has emerged.
"She says it is foul-tasting and it used to take us about an hour to work up to it, but we are at the stage where it takes about five minutes now."
Reports have it that Lloyd Abrigo, the son of the shop owner, had returned to the teahouse after learning that his father had died from sipping the drink, and had cleaned up the pitcher that contained the foul-tasting milk tea preparation.
It has taken me more than six years to forgive and forget after being presented with a disastrous dish drowning in the most foul-tasting sea of sickly butter.