
Samantha R. answered 10/29/19
English & History Certified Teacher
The easiest way to write this is to group words together to describe a character or situation from an anti-hero's point of view.
1) The anti-hero could argue and agree with these words about them (caustic, misanthrope, petulant, pejorative, vitriolic).
2) Then have the character view another character as lesser, as more innocent or stupid (obsequious, interloper, proclivity) for whatever reason.
3) Once you have that down, you can add in how the anti hero narrator doesn't want to amend their thoughts of the second character (expiate, commensurate),
4) but some catalyst makes the character internally second guess themselves (incontrovertible, tenuous, inadvertent).
You can end the story with the narrator neither loving or hating the second character as internal growth for the audience to contemplate.