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单词 wanton
释义

Definition of wanton in English:

wanton

adjective ˈwɒntənˈwɑnt(ə)n
  • 1(of a cruel or violent action) deliberate and unprovoked.

    sheer wanton vandalism
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It is wanton and pointless vandalism which has caused a lot of disruption to the school, but also those who carry out such attacks are putting their own safety at risk.
    • On Monday, September 13, we found that the glass had been smashed again, so the council has to now believe that it is just stupid, wanton vandalism.
    • A City priest vowed yesterday that he is no longer willing to turn the other cheek and tolerate the repeated acts of wanton vandalism to the windows of the presbytery which is also his home.
    • Suffice to say that BECAUSE we can sue employers for injuries and harassment at work, they're not in a position to take wanton liberties with the employees who generate their profits.
    • Their wanton vandalism causes money to be wasted and toilets to close.
    • It is his own wanton destruction of the bountiful and generous Mother Earth which will finally compel him to change his ways.
    • They then demanded an apology for this ‘unprovoked and wanton attack’.
    • The wanton and deliberate demolition of the Babri Masjid by the Hindu fundamentalist forces in December 1992 was a watershed in the governance of the country.
    • This may sound like wishful thinking but how else will we create hope from the despair of untold child death, wanton neglect of girls and women, and a rich elite feasting on the misery of millions in poverty?
    • A young man starting out in life has had his business badly damaged by this wanton destruction.
    • While we accept that feelings are running high on the issue of military landings at Shannon Airport, this kind of wanton vandalism does nothing to heighten our credibility and will probably do more damage than good.
    • Both acts of wanton destruction were deliberately aimed at symbolically injuring the self-esteem of the targeted victims, beside tremendous loss of innocent lives.
    • It's all about growth and building something successful - instead of wanton violence and destruction.
    • Stone throwing was inflicting a great deal of injury upon these beautiful birds, and the public who enjoyed strolls on the river's banks could render the most valuable service in stopping the wanton and cruel practice.
    • Just like without the wanton slaughter, rape and theft of Native Americans and their territories there would be NO USA whatsoever!
    • The corporate Visigoths' worst act of wanton destruction was the demolition of one of the most distinguished terraces ever designed by Alexander ‘Greek’ Thomson, the genius of the genre.
    • But legitimate protest has become mixed up with wanton destruction or even violence unrelated to the activities of the businesses attacked.
    • The contrast between the world's wanton violence and promiscuity on the one hand, and the Torah's pristine standards and sensitivities on the other, must have been astounding.
    • Jackson and Lee continued to preside over the wanton slaughter of men, women and children to defend the rights of freedom for white Virginians while supporting the slavery of black Virginians, among others.
    • This wanton act of vandalism took a lot of effort and it's a sad reflection on how society can be today.
    Synonyms
    deliberate, wilful, malicious, malevolent, spiteful, vicious, wicked, evil, cruel
    unprovoked, unmotivated, motiveless, arbitrary, groundless, unjustifiable, unjustified, needless, unnecessary, uncalled for, gratuitous, senseless, pointless, purposeless, aimless, useless, meaningless, empty, vacuous
  • 2dated Sexually unrestrained or having many casual sexual relationships (typically used of a woman)

    her cheeks burned as she recalled how forward she had been, how wanton
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Yet we never understand why she lives her life as such a wanton woman.
    • Writer-director Roth seems just as confused as his main character, offering wanton sexual comedy one minute and a custody battle the next, all without any context or evident structure.
    • But behind the comic veneer was a clear message about the dangers of wanton sexual activity.
    • I couldn't wait to find out and if that made me a wanton woman so be it.
    • Because they live in magnificent mansions on sprawling estates with wanton wives in jodhpurs and children with blue eyes and blonde hair, you instinctively believe that they are a higher life form.
    • Maybe if I hang out with enough gays they'll be able to convert me and I can proceed to indulge in wanton and indiscriminate sexual encounters with both genders.
    • In several paintings horizontal gestures at the lower edge of the canvas create a platform on which the thrown-back head of a wanton figure rests, low woman in the orgy of forms piling up above.
    • So he learns a siren song on the Hammond upright, woos wanton waitresses to his seaside flat and then tickles their ivories with the help of a love drug.
    • First went Anoushka, who had barely unpacked her bags before she was taking baths in front of a still sheepish Cameron and signalling her readiness for wild, wanton sex.
    • A few kisses in the moonlight and I turned into a shameless, wanton creature so unlike myself.
    • He unabashedly hits on women and has wanton sex with several women (not at the same time) - something Alex never would have done but always wanted to.
    • When is a bawdy, ribald tale of a wanton wench and her very naughty sexual adventures as boring as a trip to the Field Museum to watch dinosaur bones fossilize?
    • The later patriarchal cultures denounced them as immoral and wanton.
    • Speaking about wanton pleasures, I've been dipping into The Adulterer's Bible by Cliff Fell, which was launched last night.
    • I simply take this logic to its conclusion and point out that this woman's wanton and libertine approach to grace is the camel's nose under the tent.
    • Her friendship with the fashion glitterati would be endangered by Ronan's cowboy sense of style, his membership at the golf club threatened by her wild and wanton ways.
    • Sure there were a few drunks and wanton women scattered around the common room of the Gray Mule Inn, but it seemed like a friendly place.
    • By behaving in this salacious and wanton manner in a very public area, she is telling men that girls are just horny creatures who totally obey to men once they get us wet.
    • For a moment I toyed with presenting myself as a wanton temptress with a dozen regular gentlemen callers and a bedside drawer full of Mates.
    • Together they roam the streets, picking up prostitutes and other willing, wanton woman to calm their near-desperate need for the female form.
    Synonyms
    promiscuous, immoral, loose, immodest, indecent, shameless, unblushing, unchaste, unvirtuous, fast, of easy virtue, impure, abandoned, lustful, lecherous, lascivious, salacious, lubricious, libidinous, licentious, libertine, profligate, dissolute, dissipated, debauched, degenerate, reprobate, corrupt, sinful, whorish, disreputable
  • 3archaic Growing profusely; luxuriant.

    where wanton ivy twines
    1. 3.1 Lively; playful.
      a wanton fawn
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Her relationship with the US director is only one episode in a very wild and wanton life, which has provided her with plenty of other material to work with.
      Synonyms
      capricious, playful, frisky, jolly, fun-loving, lively, full of life, high-spirited, spirited, careless, heedless, impulsive, impetuous, rash, reckless, abandoned, audacious, cavalier, devil-may-care, happy-go-lucky
noun ˈwɒntənˈwɑnt(ə)n
archaic
  • A sexually unrestrained woman.

    she'd behaved like a wanton
verb ˈwɒntənˈwɑnt(ə)n
[no object]archaic, literary
  • 1Play; frolic.

    they sat gazing at the white-flecked pure blue sea and the various gulls that wantoned in the wake
    figurative the sea breeze wantoned among the quivering leaves of the chestnut tree
  • 2Behave in a sexually unrestrained way.

    women who have wantoned with suitors
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She, who had not come to wanton, used a borrowed wantonness as the instrument of her devotion and courage.

Derivatives

  • wantonness

  • noun ˈwɒntənnəsˈwɑnt(ə)nnəs
    • In Imamura's eyes, all this wicked wantonness is as graphic in its disgust and scandalous at its heart as hardcore images or vulgar stag reels.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Here, once again, the opulence of the city puts its citizens under enormous pressures to capitulate to a life style of wantonness and shameless disregard.
      • I had one brave classmate who ventured downtown to the family planning Clinic, terrified that her visit there would brand her with an indelible sign of wantonness, but she was the exception.
      • The idea of freedom simply has this ambiguity in it: it implies self-determination but also caprice, conscience but also wantonness; at once a principle of peace and of violence, of community and anarchy.
      • They recognize Lucy: ‘The sweetness was turned to adamantine, heartless cruelty, and the purity to voluptuous wantonness.’

Origin

Middle English wantowen 'rebellious, lacking discipline', from wan- 'badly' + Old English togen 'trained' (related to team and tow1).

  • The spelling in Middle English was wantowen ‘rebellious, lacking discipline’, from wan- ‘badly’ and Old English togen ‘trained’ (related to team and tow (Old English)).

 
 

Definition of wanton in US English:

wanton

adjectiveˈwɑnt(ə)nˈwänt(ə)n
  • 1(of a cruel or violent action) deliberate and unprovoked.

    sheer wanton vandalism
    Example sentencesExamples
    • A young man starting out in life has had his business badly damaged by this wanton destruction.
    • While we accept that feelings are running high on the issue of military landings at Shannon Airport, this kind of wanton vandalism does nothing to heighten our credibility and will probably do more damage than good.
    • Suffice to say that BECAUSE we can sue employers for injuries and harassment at work, they're not in a position to take wanton liberties with the employees who generate their profits.
    • But legitimate protest has become mixed up with wanton destruction or even violence unrelated to the activities of the businesses attacked.
    • Their wanton vandalism causes money to be wasted and toilets to close.
    • It's all about growth and building something successful - instead of wanton violence and destruction.
    • Stone throwing was inflicting a great deal of injury upon these beautiful birds, and the public who enjoyed strolls on the river's banks could render the most valuable service in stopping the wanton and cruel practice.
    • It is his own wanton destruction of the bountiful and generous Mother Earth which will finally compel him to change his ways.
    • A City priest vowed yesterday that he is no longer willing to turn the other cheek and tolerate the repeated acts of wanton vandalism to the windows of the presbytery which is also his home.
    • It is wanton and pointless vandalism which has caused a lot of disruption to the school, but also those who carry out such attacks are putting their own safety at risk.
    • Both acts of wanton destruction were deliberately aimed at symbolically injuring the self-esteem of the targeted victims, beside tremendous loss of innocent lives.
    • Just like without the wanton slaughter, rape and theft of Native Americans and their territories there would be NO USA whatsoever!
    • This wanton act of vandalism took a lot of effort and it's a sad reflection on how society can be today.
    • They then demanded an apology for this ‘unprovoked and wanton attack’.
    • The wanton and deliberate demolition of the Babri Masjid by the Hindu fundamentalist forces in December 1992 was a watershed in the governance of the country.
    • The corporate Visigoths' worst act of wanton destruction was the demolition of one of the most distinguished terraces ever designed by Alexander ‘Greek’ Thomson, the genius of the genre.
    • Jackson and Lee continued to preside over the wanton slaughter of men, women and children to defend the rights of freedom for white Virginians while supporting the slavery of black Virginians, among others.
    • This may sound like wishful thinking but how else will we create hope from the despair of untold child death, wanton neglect of girls and women, and a rich elite feasting on the misery of millions in poverty?
    • On Monday, September 13, we found that the glass had been smashed again, so the council has to now believe that it is just stupid, wanton vandalism.
    • The contrast between the world's wanton violence and promiscuity on the one hand, and the Torah's pristine standards and sensitivities on the other, must have been astounding.
    Synonyms
    deliberate, wilful, malicious, malevolent, spiteful, vicious, wicked, evil, cruel
  • 2dated Sexually unrestrained or having many casual sexual relationships (typically used of a woman).

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For a moment I toyed with presenting myself as a wanton temptress with a dozen regular gentlemen callers and a bedside drawer full of Mates.
    • By behaving in this salacious and wanton manner in a very public area, she is telling men that girls are just horny creatures who totally obey to men once they get us wet.
    • First went Anoushka, who had barely unpacked her bags before she was taking baths in front of a still sheepish Cameron and signalling her readiness for wild, wanton sex.
    • Speaking about wanton pleasures, I've been dipping into The Adulterer's Bible by Cliff Fell, which was launched last night.
    • Writer-director Roth seems just as confused as his main character, offering wanton sexual comedy one minute and a custody battle the next, all without any context or evident structure.
    • I couldn't wait to find out and if that made me a wanton woman so be it.
    • In several paintings horizontal gestures at the lower edge of the canvas create a platform on which the thrown-back head of a wanton figure rests, low woman in the orgy of forms piling up above.
    • So he learns a siren song on the Hammond upright, woos wanton waitresses to his seaside flat and then tickles their ivories with the help of a love drug.
    • Because they live in magnificent mansions on sprawling estates with wanton wives in jodhpurs and children with blue eyes and blonde hair, you instinctively believe that they are a higher life form.
    • I simply take this logic to its conclusion and point out that this woman's wanton and libertine approach to grace is the camel's nose under the tent.
    • Together they roam the streets, picking up prostitutes and other willing, wanton woman to calm their near-desperate need for the female form.
    • When is a bawdy, ribald tale of a wanton wench and her very naughty sexual adventures as boring as a trip to the Field Museum to watch dinosaur bones fossilize?
    • But behind the comic veneer was a clear message about the dangers of wanton sexual activity.
    • The later patriarchal cultures denounced them as immoral and wanton.
    • Sure there were a few drunks and wanton women scattered around the common room of the Gray Mule Inn, but it seemed like a friendly place.
    • He unabashedly hits on women and has wanton sex with several women (not at the same time) - something Alex never would have done but always wanted to.
    • Her friendship with the fashion glitterati would be endangered by Ronan's cowboy sense of style, his membership at the golf club threatened by her wild and wanton ways.
    • A few kisses in the moonlight and I turned into a shameless, wanton creature so unlike myself.
    • Maybe if I hang out with enough gays they'll be able to convert me and I can proceed to indulge in wanton and indiscriminate sexual encounters with both genders.
    • Yet we never understand why she lives her life as such a wanton woman.
    Synonyms
    promiscuous, immoral, loose, immodest, indecent, shameless, unblushing, unchaste, unvirtuous, fast, of easy virtue, impure, abandoned, lustful, lecherous, lascivious, salacious, lubricious, libidinous, licentious, libertine, profligate, dissolute, dissipated, debauched, degenerate, reprobate, corrupt, sinful, whorish, disreputable
  • 3archaic Growing profusely; luxuriant.

    where wanton ivy twines
    1. 3.1 Lively; playful.
      a wanton fawn
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Her relationship with the US director is only one episode in a very wild and wanton life, which has provided her with plenty of other material to work with.
      Synonyms
      capricious, playful, frisky, jolly, fun-loving, lively, full of life, high-spirited, spirited, careless, heedless, impulsive, impetuous, rash, reckless, abandoned, audacious, cavalier, devil-may-care, happy-go-lucky
nounˈwɑnt(ə)nˈwänt(ə)n
archaic
  • A sexually unrestrained woman.

verbˈwɑnt(ə)nˈwänt(ə)n
[no object]literary, archaic
  • 1Play; frolic.

    they sat gazing at the white-flecked pure blue sea and the various gulls that wantoned in the wake
  • 2Behave in a sexually unrestrained way.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • She, who had not come to wanton, used a borrowed wantonness as the instrument of her devotion and courage.

Origin

Middle English wantowen ‘rebellious, lacking discipline’, from wan- ‘badly’ + Old English togen ‘trained’ (related to team and tow).

 
 
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