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Profligate   /prˈɔflɪgˌeɪt/   Listen
adjective
Profligate  adj.  
1.
Overthrown; beaten; conquered. (Obs.) "The foe is profligate, and run."
2.
Broken down in respect of rectitude, principle, virtue, or decency; openly and shamelessly immoral or vicious; dissolute; as, profligate man or wretch. "A race more profligate than we." "Made prostitute and profligate muse."
Synonyms: Abandoned; corrupt; dissolute; vitiated; depraved; vicious; wicked. See Abandoned.



noun
Profligate  n.  An abandoned person; one openly and shamelessly vicious; a dissolute person. "Such a profligate as Antony."



verb
Profligate  v. t.  To drive away; to overcome. Note: (A Latinism) (Obs.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Profligate" Quotes from Famous Books



... "Confessions," in the style of Rousseau, and a Paris bookseller has contracted to give her a fortune for them. The three greatest—intellectually greatest—women of modern times have lived in France and it is remarkable that they have been three of the most shamelessly profligate in all history. The worst of these, probably—Madame de Stael—left us no records of her long-continued, disgusting, and almost incredible licentiousness, so remarkable that Chateaubriand deemed her the most abandoned person in France at a period when modesty was ...
— International Weekly Miscellany Vol. I. No. 3, July 15, 1850 • Various

... was one of the most extravagant and profligate subjects that Russia had acquired by the partition of Poland. After squandering away his own patrimony, he had ruined his mother and two sisters, and subsisted now entirely by gambling and borrowing. Among his associates, in similar circumstances ...
— The Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte • Bourrienne, Constant, and Stewarton

... his abilities than I do; no one could have loved him more, if he had deserved it; what his behaviour has been to the public, to his friends, and to his family is notorious. Facts are too stubborn, and to those I appeal, and not to the testimonies of ignorant and profligate people. However, if hereafter you can reconcile yourself to him and to his behaviour towards you, I will forgive him, and although I desire to lay myself under no obligation to him, I will remember only that he is the child of ...
— George Selwyn: His Letters and His Life • E. S. Roscoe and Helen Clergue

... Putkammer, after leading a wild and dissolute life, had expired within its walls. For years previously, many a mysterious story, fraught with dark hints of seduction and infanticide, had been whispered over the surrounding country; and when at last death arrested the Baron's profligate career, some reported that he had been strangled in requital of outrage committed,—others, that the Devil had taken home his own, as they ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 97, November, 1865 • Various

... situation in London for Fanny, which the unsuspicious Curate accepted immediately. As soon as he had committed himself, it was confided to the audience that the waggoner was a depraved villain, in the employ of that notorious profligate, Colonel Chartress, who had commissioned a second myrmidon (of the female sex) to lure Fanny from virtue and the country, to vice and the metropolis. By the time the plot had "thickened" thus far, the scene changed, and we got to London ...
— Rambles Beyond Railways; - or, Notes in Cornwall taken A-foot • Wilkie Collins


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