debauchee如何读

英:[ˌdebɔ:'tʃi:]

美:[ˌdebɔ'tʃi]

debauchee是什么意思

  • n.放荡者;纵欲者

debauchee自然拼读

deb·au·chee

de baw chi

debauchee英英释义

  • n.a dissolute person; usually a man who is morally unrestrained

debauchee词源中文解释

"纵欲或放荡的人,沉溺于感官快感的恶习者",1660年代,源自法语 débauché "放荡的(人)",是 debaucher 的过去分词名词化(见 debauch)。

Debauchee, n. One who has so earnestly pursued pleasure that he has had the misfortune to overtake it. [Ambrose Bierce, "Devil's Dictionary," 1911]
Debauchee, n。一个如此热衷于追求快乐,以至于不幸追上了它的人。[安布罗斯·比尔斯,《魔鬼词典》,1911年]

debauchee词源英文解释

borrowed from French débauché, noun derivative from past participle of débaucher "to divert or distract (a person) from work, obligations, etc., tempt into excess or immorality" — more at debauch >entry 1

The first known use of debauchee was in 1661

debauchee 例句

1 His generosity, however, still more displayed itself in wasting, among debauchees like himself, whatever he possessed, and thinking no means ignoble to dissipate what he had thought no means dishonourable to obtain.

2 This very Pope, Alexander VI., was one of the greatest debauchees of his age, and died by poison administered by the hand of his own son.

3 "Honest and a widow!" exclaimed one of the debauchees.

4 The French sceptre had fallen into the hands of a prince, who had come to the throne a debauchee; and to whom the throne seemed only a scene for the larger display of his vices.

5 Accordingly, in studying the historic families of Europe, we frequently find that the devotee and the debauchee alternate, each producing the other, both being expressions of the same moral and mental defect.

6 For a woman infamous for her material life — to many, she remains the uncouth child of Soviet privilege, a debauchee of suspect talents who imported only the worst of the West — Sobchak is well read.

7 There she sat in the middle of the room, nearer the fire than a youthful debauchee who sat by her with his arm round her waist.

8 He was an ignoble sot, a drunkard, and a debauchee; but, in the eyes of most young ladies, such qualities were rather admired than not.

9 It took a few weeks to make me a spendthrift and a debauchee; a few more, and I became a duellist and a brawler.

10 Goose-skin—"You fat monastic debauchee, trust to me for adding all the needed zest to the music!"

11 I tell you that your Romans were infernal debauchees; they put up with—aye, cultivated all the vices!

12 By faith, barbarous Calvin caused Servetus to be burnt by a slow fire; and through faith, St. Austin, that drunken debauchee, obtained a good report.

13 The worn-out debauchee had neither the merit of acquiescing in the change nor the courage to resist it.

14 the biography of a debauchee who underwent a late-life religious conversion and became a monk

15 But the Church has often found that an imperial philosopher is something even worse than an imperial debauchee.

16 Yet Florizel, debauchee, gambler, libertine, has his admirers to this day.

17 England continued to ply the empress through her favorite and debauchee, Potemkin.

18 The chaplain was a fine specimen of the young debauchee.

19 He was, what Pitt was not, a genial companion, fond of the bottle and the chase; he had, indeed, been a gambler and a debauchee.

20 Free-thinkers and debauchees did not have to consider Marie-Th�r�se; she had not a shadow of influence over her husband.

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