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5 Sentences With "most dissolute"

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

Heliogabalus the most dissolute man of the world, amidst his most riotous sensualities, intended, whensoever occasion should force him to it, to have a daintie death.
Lydia Martin 2007, p. 56 Wickham is no exception to the rule: he has charm and immediately captivates by his apparent frankness and friendly ease.Pierre Goubert 1975, p. 128 But he is the most dissolute and the most cynical of all the seducers described by Jane Austen, and he uses his good looks and good education to create an illusion.
Though Charibert was eloquent and learned in the law, Gregory of Tours found him one of the most dissolute of the early Merovingians. He maintained four concurrent wives, two of them sisters,A bishops' council held in Pars under Charibert in 561 or 562 narrowly defined the consanguinities ruled to be incest. (Alexander C. Murray, ed. A Companion to Gregory of Tours p. 454).
Retrieved 1 December 2017. After her marriage, Dorothy was known as "Lady Eyre" or "Lady Ayres". James Whitelocke, recalling the events of 1611, recorded that Eyre and Bulstrode were married without the consent of either family, and wrote, "the man is one of the most dissolute, unjust, and vicious reprobates that lives upon the face of the earth".John Bruce, Liber Famelicus of Sir James Whitelocke (Camden Society, London, 1858), pp. 16-18, 25-6.
16-18, 25-6. Whitelocke recorded that Eyre and Bulstrode were married without the consent of either family, and wrote, "the man is one of the most dissolute, unjust, and vicious reprobates that lives upon the face of the earth". They had a son who predeceased John Eyre, born in October 1611 at Flambards at Cold Norton, Essex, the house of Dorothy's mother Cecill, now Lady Brown.John Bruce, Liber Famelicus of Sir James Whitelocke (Camden Society, London, 1858), pp. 25-6.

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