debauched

[ UK /dɪbˈɔːt‍ʃt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. unrestrained by convention or morality
    riotous living
    Congreve draws a debauched aristocratic society
    fast women
    deplorably dissipated and degraded
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How To Use debauched In A Sentence

  • David Sowerby, 55, from Workington, was today facing a long spell behind bars after a judge said the pervert "debauched" his victims. News round-up
  • Brutal, licentious, violent and debauched as it was, however, ancient Rome is relevant still.
  • His debauched antics are beginning to catch up with him as his fed-up pregnant girl-friend has banned him from his own house!
  • ___ America will become less Judeo-Christian, more "paganized" and more debauched morally. Eric Williams: The War on Christmas in July
  • It all began with an innocent Xmas dinner, which turned into a rather debauched affair.
  • Lombroso's work was translated into French in 1887 and won the praise of Hippolyte Taine, who thought that the French Revolution was caused by a debauched and degenerate canaille.
  • Her excessive libido and debauched lifestyle are now discussed with unprecedented enthusiasm and indiscretion.
  • It made it hard for me to be undebauched. Times, Sunday Times
  • Welsh and Gibson came up with eight characters and a typically debauched storyline that begins in 1985 when two Edinburgh teenagers run away to Blackpool and hook up with a Scottish goalkeeper and two prostitutes.
  • But what have I, a continuing PhD, done to deserve to join in the debauched bacchanalian revelry of undergrads?
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