Definitionadj. unrestrained by convention or morality
Last update: September 2, 2016
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He is infamous for leading a dissolute life. [adjective]
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A dissolute wizard with a nasty habit for getting his friends killed, John Constantine has let himself go. [Please select]
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Of course we have problems at once because sinful lives can mean dissolute lives and holy lives can incorporate healthy lives. [Please select]
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Base in soul, corrupt in heart, dissolute in mind and senses, the Neo-Christians seek especially after the external form, and admire religion, as they love women, for its physical beauty. [Please select]
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Aristotle was banished, Socrates drank the hemlock, Epaminondas was called to account, for having proved superior in intelligence and virtue to some dissolute and foolish demagogues. [Please select]
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The Barbarians were less selfish, less imperious, less dissolute, and less cruel than the Romans. [Please select]
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This therefore was the reason why the still comparatively young though dissolute man who now addressed Stephen was spoken of by some with facetious proclivities as Lord John Corley. [Please select]
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By the dissolute boy, Nero, there stands the prime minister Seneca, the chief of the philosophers of his time; "Seneca the saint," cry the Christians of the next century. [Please select]
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A fiendish libertine from his earliest years this stinking goat of Mendes gave precocious signs of infantile debauchery, recalling the cities of the plain, with a dissolute granddam. [Please select]
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He may yet turn out to be a worthless fellow, dissolute and dishonest," continued the captain." [Please select]
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After a dissolute youth he was said to have given soul to the Devil. [adjective]
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