Synonyms for debauchee
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : deb-aw-chee, -shee |
Phonetic Transcription : ˌdɛb ɔˈtʃi, -ˈʃi |
Top 10 synonyms for debauchee Other synonyms for the word debauchee
- bacchanalian
- barfly
- bibber
- bon vivant
- dipsomaniac
- dissipater
- drinker
- epicure
- epicurean
- freak
- glutton
- good-for-nothing
- gourmand
- inebriate
- lecher
- libertine
- lush
- nighthawk
- no-good
- old goat
- operator
- paillard
- pleasuremonger
- pleasureseeker
- prodigal
- profligate
- rake
- reprobate
- roué
- satyr
- sensualist
- soak
- sot
- souse
- sponge
- stiff
- swinger
- sybarite
- thrill-seeker
- tippler
- toper
- tosspot
- voluptuary
- waster
- wastrel
- wine-bibber
- wino
Définition of debauchee
Origin :- 1660s, from French débauché "debauched (person)," noun use of past participle of debaucher (see 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]
- As in pervert : noun person who lacks morals
- As in profligate : noun person who is immoral
- As in wanton : noun profligate person
- As in drunkard : noun one who drinks too much
- As in libertine : noun debauched person
- As in hedonist : noun person who seeks pleasure above other values
- This man was evil, not with the grossness of a debauchee but with the thinness of the devotee.
- Extract from : « Sir Henry Morgan, Buccaneer » by Cyrus Townsend Brady
- I would have your Majesty consider which of us is the debauchee.
- Extract from : « A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems » by Various
- Beware of love, for it is worse than disease for a debauchee, and it is ridiculous.
- Extract from : « Child of a Century, Complete » by Alfred de Musset
- In his own ears it sounded like the still-born narrative of a debauchee.
- Extract from : « The Rest Hollow Mystery » by Rebecca N. Porter
- Dandy as he was, and debauchee, to her at least he had been passionately faithful.
- Extract from : « Darkness and Dawn » by Frederic W. Farrar
- There was nothing about his features to indicate the confirmed inebriate or debauchee.
- Extract from : « The Yazoo Mystery » by Irving Craddock
- He was neither milksop nor adventurer, neither celibate by nature nor debauchee.
- Extract from : « Arundel » by Edward Frederic Benson
- But his way of talking to women and about them was more odious than the way of a debauchee.
- Extract from : « The Autobiography of Mark Rutherford » by Mark Rutherford
- Tiberius, in the days he spent in Capri, was a tyrant and a debauchee.
- Extract from : « Naples Past and Present » by Arthur H. Norway
- It is this: Logan was a restless, disappointed intriguer and debauchee.
- Extract from : « James VI and the Gowrie Mystery » by Andrew Lang
Antonyms for debauchee
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019