We have no meanings for "loose morals" in our records yet.
1 To dream that you encounter a fiend, forbodes reckless living and loose morals .
2 To kiss a strange woman, denotes loose morals and perverted integrity.
3 You aren't going to give me a lecture on loose morals , are you?
4 She has developed beastly loose morals in her old age.
5 The sung petition petered out into a tirade against the loose morals of the day.
6 I always knew you had loose morals , our Mabel.
7 Loosely belted tunics are supposed to denote loose morals .
8 The problem was that trouser-wearing was seen as a sign of loose morals - and loose women.
9 One was of loose morals , or at any rate she trifled with temptation; the other two managed to withdraw.
10 They were nearly all of the Church of England, with rather loose morals , fond of fox-hunting and gay society.
11 She was a Catholic from the Coast, which in rural Christian circles meant she was a woman of loose morals .
12 Valerie was so much more spectacular, and outrageous, with her box of joints, her loose morals , her wild red hair.
14 He said it would be "an investment", and she was "flattered that he mistook me for a lady of loose morals " .
15 It was a day of loose morals , the first fruit of the vast scientific movement of the century, whose last was the French Revolution.
16 Lord Mohun, it is well known, was a man of loose morals , a rancorous spirit, and, in short, reflected no honour on his titles.
Other examples for "loose morals"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Loose morals through the time
Loose morals across language varieties