释义 |
licentious /lʌɪˈsɛnʃəs /adjective1Promiscuous and unprincipled in sexual matters: the ruler’s tyrannical and licentious behaviour the licentious avenues of New York City...- World famous, he is also a great womanizer, acknowledged as such by his colleagues, wife, and friends who themselves enjoy an entertainingly licentious social and sexual life.
- The poet Philip Larkin noted that sexual intercourse began in 1963, but a long suppressed study has shown that Britain indulged in licentious behaviour long before the dawn of the permissive society, writes Tom Baird.
- I myself visited a striptease establishment in the early 1970s and found the experience detumescent and soporific rather than conducive to licentious behaviour.
Synonyms dissolute, dissipated, debauched, degenerate, salacious, immoral, wanton, decadent, depraved, profligate, impure, sinful, wicked, corrupt, indecent, libertine; lustful, lecherous, lascivious, libidinous, prurient, lubricious, lewd, promiscuous, unchaste, carnal, fleshly, intemperate, abandoned; ribald, risqué, smutty, dirty, filthy, coarse, perverted informal horny, raunchy, naughty, pervy British informal randy rare concupiscent, lickerish 2 archaic Disregarding accepted conventions, especially in grammar or literary style.In Paris it was welcomed by a public with a strong appetite for the irreverent and licentious in literature, and probably for subversive ideas of any kind in philosophy and theology. Derivativeslicentiously /lʌɪˈsɛnʃəsli / adverb ...- In it the hero Oliver laments: ‘Wouldn't it have been really better to live like Mario, not socially labelled, not insured or predestined, but irresponsibly, even licentiously, within the limits of kindness and honour?’
- Perhaps no creature makes a better role model than these spotted animals, licentiously advertising their lust and hunger in wild howls and mad scratchings.
- Several runners advanced across the field towards the keep, and he grinned licentiously.
licentiousness /lʌɪˈsɛnʃəsnəs / noun ...- In Galatians 5: 19-21 the list is headed by sexual immorality, impurity, licentiousness, and idolatry.
- Tiberius distinguished his reign by great indolence, excessive cruelty, unprincipled avarice, and abandoned licentiousness.
- Default, unearned respect for culture breeds a decadent cultural licentiousness in which any amount of pretentious nonsense is encouraged and propagated.
OriginLate Middle English: from Latin licentiosus, from licentia 'freedom'. Rhymesconscientious, contentious, pretentious, sententious, tendentious |