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Перевод: licentious speek licentious


[прилагательное]
распущенный; безнравственный; не считающийся с правилами; вольный


Тезаурус:

  1. The lips were more sensuous than the original, almost licentious.
  2. By the third house she completed "lecher", "libertine" and "licentious" before she heard Tom mutter: "Rita, please.
  3. In her first published work, in 1645, Cary defended free grace while condemning the "licentious" antinomianism with which it was often associated.
  4. A puritan in a licentious age: always a Roundhead, never a Cavalier.
  5. As for the notion of canvassing his licentious friends, it was out of the question.
  6. (The social investigator Henry Mayhew came across bundling practices while touring Germany in the 1860s, which he took to be "licentious".)
  7. This includes nudity in fact or in silhouette, or any licentious notice thereof by other characters in the pictures.
  8. Gilbert refers to a dissertation by Richard Allen Soloway which shows contemporary fears of Christianity falling before the atheistical, licentious, and immoral foreigner ("Sexual Deviance and Disaster", 98, 99, 100-;1, 110-;11).
  9. As for the Gascons, they are gossipy, licentious, and poorly dressed; although they eat and drink far too much they don't sit at table but squat around a fire; they all share the same cup and when they go to sleep they all share the same rotting straw, master and mistress, servants and all.
  10. He was equally licentious and avaricious; and in his early days, at least until family misfortune brought a pronounced strain of piety, his aims were equally secular.
  11. In the 1930s, the Supreme Court began to widen its interpretation of free speech to include writings and films of little or no artistic merit, provided they did not include "licentious" speech, the forms of which were listed in 1942 as libel, slander, insulting or "fighting" words, and obscenity, all of which were excluded from First Amendment protection.
  12. Although as far as can be established they were not as licentious as myth has claimed, their presence increased the risk of drunkenness and brawling.
  13. Michael, although reputedly a licentious and irreligious man, sent Cyril and Methodius on a mission which had far-reaching consequences for the future of Christianity, although their mission to Moravia achieved only a temporary victory for the Byzantine cause.

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