debauchee

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1
debauchee
debauchee (dɛbɒˈʃiː) Also 7 deboichee, 8 deboshee; also debauché(e. [a. F. débauché debauched (person), n. use of pa. pple. of débaucher to debauch. In 17th and 18th c. also deboichee, deboshee: cf. deboise, deboshed.] One who is addicted to vicious indulgence in sensual pleasures.a 1661 B. Holyday ... Oxford English Dictionary
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debauchee
debauchee/ˌdebɔ:ˈtʃi:; ˌdɛbɔ`tʃi/ ndebauched person 道德败坏的人. 牛津英汉双解词典
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Anacréon (Cherubini)
One critic complained that in his protagonist Cherubini had represented "un vieux debauché déguisé en héros d'opéra" ("an old debauchee disguised as an wikipedia.org
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The Old Debauchees
The Old Debauchees, originally titled The Despairing Debauchee, was a play written by Henry Fielding. The Old Debauchees, originally titled The Despairing Debauchee, appeared with The Covent-Garden Tragedy on 1 June 1732. wikipedia.org
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deboicht
deboichee, -ery, deboicht, -ness see debauchee, -ery, deboist, -ness. Oxford English Dictionary
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Henry Moore, 4th Earl of Drogheda
Drogheda rapidly became a debauchee, and after squandering large sums, died at the age of 26, leaving his younger brother a heavily encumbered estate. wikipedia.org
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deboshee
deboshee, -ery, -ment obs. ff. debauchee, etc. Oxford English Dictionary
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Gondibert
John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester uses it satirically in The Disabled Debauchee. his peace with the 1650s and advertise his bid to continue Davenant's Laureate project, but it would soon be wickedly parodied in Rochester's 'Disabled Debauchee wikipedia.org
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untrembling
unˈtrembling, ppl. a. (un-1 10.)1570 Levins Manip. 137 Vntrembling, intrepidus. 1708 J. Philips Cyder i. 109 Nor untrembling can'st thou see, How from a scraggy rock..hardy men..Cut samphire. 1742 Blair Grave 386 Then might the Debauchee Untrembling mouth the Heav'ns. 1846 Keble Lyra Innoc. 179 Not ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Junia Secunda
private letter to Atticus, however, Cicero claimed that Junia was unfaithful to Lepidus, on the grounds that her portrait was seen among the chattels of a debauchee wikipedia.org
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deboist
† deˈboist, ppl. a. (n.) Obs. Forms: 7 deboist, -oyst; -oysed; -ost(e; -oished, -oisht, -oyshed, -oysht, -oicht. [By-form of debauched: cf. deboise vb.] 1. = debauched.1604 [see deboistly]. 1612 Woodall Surg. Mate Pref. Wks. (1653) 18 A general deboist and base kind of habit. 1622 F. Markham Bk. War... Oxford English Dictionary
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The Libertine (album)
"The maimed debauchee" is a fairly brief piece, but resembles the Interlude at its climax. Track listing "History of the insipid" "Upon drinking in a bowl" "Impromptu on an English court" "Upon nothing" "The maimed debauchee" "The wish" wikipedia.org
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under-debauchee
under-debauchee (under-1 6 a.)1676 G. Etherege Man of Mode iv. i, A dozen such good men as you would be enough to atone for..all the under-debauchees of the town. Oxford English Dictionary
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chuserel
† chuserel [App. an error of some kind.]1731–1800 Bailey, Chusherel, a Whore master, a Debauchee. Shaksp. 1847–78 Halliwell, Chuserel, a debauched fellow. South. Oxford English Dictionary
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Sophia Lee
Other works included The Life of a Lover (1804) and Ormond; or the Debauchee (1810). She died at her house near Clifton, Bristol on 13 March 1824. The Life of a Lover (1804) Ormond; or the Debauchee (1810) Notes Attribution References Rebecca Garwood, 'Sophia Lee (1750-1824) and Harriet Lee (1757 wikipedia.org
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