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dissoluteness
noun
Lack of restraint; excess.
synonyms
Exact(6)
Rather, as this newspaper described it earlier this year (see article), it comes down to a separate contest between martyrs and traitors.The martyrs have a simple, coherent message that goes well with the Wahhabi and other Islamist causes: failure in Muslim countries has been due to moral dissoluteness and secularism.
Opponents, on the other hand, cited parallels between the critical treatment in Being and Time of notions such as "publicness," "everydayness," "idle talk," and "curiosity" and fascist-oriented critiques of the vapidity and dissoluteness of bourgeois liberalism.
For years, watching TV had made me sick with a sense of dissoluteness, but now suddenly it seemed great.
Thanks to historians like Suetonius and Tacitus, the Rome of the emperors has always had a reputation for dissoluteness and tyranny; but the Roman Republic, which flourished until Julius Caesar became dictator, was an altogether nobler memory.
They are at that peculiar moment of life, their late teens and early 20s, when dissoluteness has not yet calcified into hopelessness".
The excerpt, titled "Gatsby in New Delhi," examines both the immense growth and progress of India as well as the cultural dissoluteness that often accompanies such rapid change.
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