Wantonness
11wantonness — wan·ton·ness …
12wantonness — See: wanton …
13wantonness — See wanton act; wanton omission …
14wantonness — noun 1. the trait of lacking restraint or control; reckless freedom from inhibition or worry she danced with abandon • Syn: ↑abandon, ↑unconstraint • Derivationally related forms: ↑wanton • Hypernyms: ↑unr …
15sexual wantonness — recklessness in sexual behavior …
16ὑβριστικά — ὑβριστικός given to wantonness neut nom/voc/acc pl ὑβριστικά̱ , ὑβριστικός given to wantonness fem nom/voc/acc dual ὑβριστικά̱ , ὑβριστικός given to wantonness fem nom/voc sg (doric aeolic) …
17ὑβριστικώτερον — ὑβριστικός given to wantonness adverbial comp ὑβριστικός given to wantonness masc acc comp sg ὑβριστικός given to wantonness neut nom/voc/acc comp sg …
18wanton — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English, from wan deficient, wrong, mis (from Old English, from wan deficient) + towen, past participle of teen to draw, train, discipline, from Old English tēon more at tow Date: 14th century 1. a. archaic hard to… …
19Theodora (6th century) — Theodora (Greek: Θεοδώρα) (c. 500 June 28 548), was empress of the Byzantine Empire and the wife of Emperor Justinian I. Like her husband, she is a saint in the Orthodox Church, commemorated on November 14. Theodora is perhaps the most… …
20abandon — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. relinquish, resign, give up, forgo, surrender, discontinue, waive, abdicate; leave, quit, evacuate, withdraw (from); desert, forsake, maroon, discard, drop; let go, throw up, pull out of, have done …