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14 Sentences With "dissoluteness"

How to use dissoluteness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dissoluteness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dissoluteness". Mastering all the usages of "dissoluteness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But I do think that the potency of Biden's appeal as the smile to Trump's scowl, the calm to his storm and the rectitude to his dissoluteness may be underrated.
This failure to know ourselves does not limit our dissoluteness and ruinousness, only our self-knowledge as such.
One major counter-argument was the call for poetic justice. Thomas Shadwell and Dryden, for example, discussed the necessity of poetic justice to punish dissoluteness in their plays.Wolfgang Zach, Poetic Justice: Theorie und Geschichte einer literarischen Doktrin (Tübingen, 1986), pp. 115–22. To reintroduce moral standards, the rake, they demanded, had to be reformed towards the end of the play.
In Roman times, the town was notorious for its dissoluteness. Juvenal's Satire VI referred to the "debauchery" that prevailed there. The emperor Hadrian built a villa at Tivoli, 18 miles away from Rome, where he replicated for his enjoyment architectural patterns from all parts of the Roman Empire. One of these (and the most excavated and studied today) was borrowed from Canopus.
Collins based his protagonist on Manhattan defense attorney William Joseph Fallon, dubbed "The Great Mouthpiece" in the New York press, who had a short but spectacularly successful career before succumbing to the effects of his own dissoluteness at the age of 41.Bryk, William (2001-11-13). "Bill Fallon, the "Great Mouthpiece" and Archetypal Amoral Criminal Defense Lawyer" @ nypres.com. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
He wrote that "It looks drunken, brutal, and narrow-minded, and has an expression of dissoluteness the most revolting".The long tradition of negative reactions to the Bacchus is delineated in notes to Giorgio Vasari La Vita di Michelangelo... edited with commentary by Paola Barocchi (Milan 1962: II:62–67). The art historian Johannes Wilde summarised responses to the sculpture thus: "in brief... it is not the image of a god".Johannes Wilde, Michelangelo: Six Lectures (Oxford University Press) 1978:33.
François-Louis Chartier de Lotbinière (1716 – in or after 1785), Knight of Malta, was a Recollet priest in Canada, the son of Eustache Chartier de Lotbinière by his wife Marie-Francoise, daughter of François-Marie Renaud d'Avène des Meloizes. He was the elder brother of Michel Chartier de Lotbinière, Marquis de Lotbinière. Chartier de Lotbinière's career as a priest was marked by "drunkenness and dissoluteness". He was placed under a suspension from all church activities by Bishop Pontbriand around 1756.
At this time, proper conduct was considered as much a public matter as a private matter. The struggle against worldly dissoluteness, and the enforcement of respect for the family and the pacification of society were setting Nîmes "on the path towards social reform and, by extension, modernity itself." As a result of this new moral rigour, there were remarkably low rates of premarital conceptions and illegitimate births among Huguenots by the seventeenth century in France compared to the rates among their Roman Catholic opponents, from whom the Reformed sought to distinguish themselves by their moral holiness. The low illegitimate birth rate indicates that the Calvinists had internalised the values that condemned premarital sex as immoral.
Stevenson composed a poem "The Pirates' Island" on the suggestion of Trousseau while recovering. J. Marion Sims, a colleague of his father, attacked Trousseau in his autobiography: > He was a gambler and every thing else that was bad. His father was worried > to death with his dissoluteness and foolish extravagance, and had to pay > enormous sums of money to extricate him from his disgraceful orgies and > gambling complications. Trousseau admitted he left Paris penniless after losing his money on speculations, but said Sims sensationalized the story. In July 1893 he resigned from the board of health, protesting that the strict segregation policy (which he had supported about 20 years earlier) was no longer scientifically necessary.
In addition to the eponymous Rolle, the Rolliad attacked Pitt for his consumption of port and for having no relationships with women: :'Tis true, indeed, we oft abuse him, :Because he bends to no man; :But Slander's self dares not accuse him :Of stiffness to a woman. Pitt was also ridiculed for his youth: :Above the rest, majestically great, :Behold the infant Atlas of the state, :The matchless miracle of modern days, :In whom Britannia to the world displays :A sight to make surrounding nations stare; :A kingdom trusted to a school-boy's care. Pitt's ally Henry Dundas was attacked for his dissoluteness. Charles Jenkinson also had perhaps more than his fair share of criticism.
Because the nature of what is erotic is fluid,Evans, David T., Sexual Citizenship: The Material Construction of Sexualities, (New York: Routledge, 1993) early definitions of the term attempted to conceive eroticism as some form of sensual or romantic love or as the human sex drive (libido); for example, the Encyclopédie of 1755 states that the erotic "is an epithet which is applied to everything with a connection to the love of the sexes; one employs it particularly to characterize...a dissoluteness, an excess".Encyclopédie (1755), quoted in Lynn Hunt ed., Eroticism and the Body Politic (London 1991) p. 90 Because eroticism is wholly dependent on the viewer's culture and personal tastes pertaining to what, exactly, defines the erotic,Foster.
He had been chosen to meet Hamilton in controversy, with a view to convincing him of his errors, but the arguments of the Scottish proto- martyr and, above all, the spectacle of his heroism at the stake impressed Alesius so powerfully that he was won over to the cause of the Reformers. A sermon he preached before the Synod at St Andrews against the dissoluteness of the clergy offended the provost, who placed him in prison, and might have carried his resentment further if Alesius had not escaped to Germany in 1532. After travelling through northern Europe, he settled down at Wittenberg, where he made the acquaintance of Martin Luther and Philipp Melanchthon, and signed the Augsburg confession. Meanwhile, he was tried in Scotland for heresy and condemned without a hearing.
For instance they held that: > Even if it is true that those who are adept in the habit of faith and > holiness can only with difficulty fall back to their former profaneness and > dissoluteness of life, yet we believe that it is entirely possible, if not > rarely done, that they fall back little by little and until they completely > lack their prior faith and charity. And having abandoned the way of > righteousness, they revert to their worldly impurity which they had truly > left, returning like pigs to wallowing in the mud and dogs to their vomit, > and are again entangled in lusts of the flesh which they had formerly, truly > fled. And thus totally and at length also they are finally torn from the > grace of God unless they seriously repent in time.
Macalda was noted for her unscrupulous political conduct, inclination to betray marriage (political and human), and for her easy and promiscuous sexual habits; this dissoluteness, even having a brush with "suspicion of incest," tended to degenerate into an "exhibitionism veined with nymphomania." She was the wife of the Grand Justiciar of the Kingdom of Sicily, . Proud Amazon, educated in arms and courage, gifted with a martial bearing, moved by a cynical and ambitious nature, Macalda's vigorous feminine personality deployed her influence first in the circle of Charles of Anjou and then at the court of Peter III of Aragon, whom, according to a chronicler of the time, Macalda tried to seduce, but without success. Her qualities made her a protagonist in the foreground of this important epoch of transition and violent upheavals in the history of the Kingdom of Sicily that was marked by the bloody revolt of the Sicilian Vespers and led to the tumultuous alternation between Angevin and Aragonese rule.

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