Corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality.
A wild gathering involving excessive drinking and promiscuity.
Синонимы
Examples for "corrupt "
Examples for "corrupt "
1 Power tends to corrupt , he said memorably, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
2 Protesters blame a corrupt political system that shares power among sectarian parties.
3 They are corrupt ; they are base; they are cowardly; they are cruel.
4 They pay this corrupt money to thugs, and then violence takes place.
5 Research suggests mail voting would produce a near-negligible number of corrupt votes.
1 The profane words are but a speck in a sea of monosyllables.
2 It was the profane heathen, of whom Israel learned to worship idols.
3 The profane is judged by all; but the other by a few.
4 August 22 : - Very profane and vindictive in his accusations towards the prison officials.
5 The rough ashlar is the profane , the perfect ashlar is the initiate.
1 I have good reasons for mentioning his name: He's a pervert , Travis.
2 The Novels by Eminent Hands do not pervert the originals they exaggerate.
3 You probably think I'm some pervert out to take advantage of you.
4 Matzneff has said Springora was misrepresenting him as a pervert and abuser.
5 He had always sought to pervert and discredit the word of God.
1 However, certain viruses can subvert the immune response to establish persistent infections.
2 Poet'Most organisations understand that they have to subvert their own received reality.
3 Romantic comedies have certain rules they either have to follow or subvert .
4 But the National embrace the obvious the more effectively to subvert it.
5 Viruses activate inflammasomes but then subvert resulting inflammatory responses to avoid elimination.
1 It is a mistake to suppose love only elevates; it can debase .
2 At every point of contact with our labor system, they debase it.
3 The indignant heart repels a conviction that is believed to debase it.
4 And I never, never can debase my nature to change that love.
5 Such men,-orwomen,-mayhardly, perhaps, debase themselves with the more vulgar vices.
1 To defeat an army, you must demoralize and throw it into disorder.
2 Everything was done to demoralize , frighten and overawe judges, witnesses and jurors.
3 The fear exists that the fall of the captain will demoralize the rest.
4 We indulge in feelings which tend to demoralize the whole character.
5 In plain English, he wishes to demoralize only the higher classes of society.
1 Small-pox does not vitiate the blood of a people; this disease does.
2 It is as apt to vitiate the system as to protect it.
3 Encroaching winter and ineffective international commitment may vitiate the humanitarian and redevelopment efforts.
4 Civilization tends to corrupt men, as large towns tend to vitiate the air.
5 Tithes, politics, or something wrong in principle, vitiate every Irish murder.
1 Should we clear it of bugs or use it to misdirect them?
2 Your energy levels are likely to be high, but you could misdirect them.
3 Don't think you are going to misdirect us with that sort of thing.
4 It is Mr. Lance whom you thought to misdirect to this solitary house.
5 It was a gambit, a false flag to misdirect the rest of us.
1 It believes a full apology would demoralise its citizens and project weakness.
2 Too much politics in our food threatened to demoralise our large cities.
3 Analysts said the move could demoralise the remaining cadres of ULFA.
4 Two or three executions of this kind usually sufficed to demoralise the enemy.
5 It hadn't struck me before, but it is a fact; I do demoralise children.
1 Such attacks are apt to deprave both the assailant and the assailed.
2 In the latter, many men's wits spent to deprave the wit of one.
3 Crowd bad men and women together, and they corrupt and deprave each other.
4 If my book is a romance, the fault lies with those who deprave mankind.
5 Such engagements are always dangerous; sometimes they deprave the character of the man or woman.'
1 The chances for a debauch looked peaked and slim in the extreme.
2 Night comes and robs me of the finish of the unbridled debauch .
3 The unfortunate governor's ukase had precipitated a general debauch for all hands.
4 The Maalem rose at last, somewhat unsteadily after his debauch of kief.
5 It is splendid flesh, but he has been on a long debauch .
6 At St. Bartholomew's he had an attack of vomiting after a debauch .
7 Could debauch , could ruin of body and soul be put more plainly?
8 The debauch of the previous night had left the usual effects behind it.
9 One had in mind the cleaning up after some ghastly debauch .
10 It is a necessary relaxation of the strenuous, a debauch of the soul.
11 The dangerous work of the next few months became like a long debauch .
12 The Padishah went on quite impassible-thepicture of debauch and ennui.
13 He was in misery; he was paying for last night's debauch .
14 The man was still drunk, but only with the lees of the debauch .
15 But the Lost Nation folks use it as an excuse for a debauch .
16 War is a great debauch , perhaps now the last the race will experience.
Другие примеры для термина "debauch"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Об этом термине Глагол
Изъявительное наклонение · Настоящее