loose-living

Translations

loose-living

[ˈluːsˈlɪvɪŋ] ADJde vida airada, de vida inmoral
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
References in periodicals archive ?
But loose-living demon Crowley, (David) and fussy angel Aziraphale (Michael), decide to take it upon themselves to stop Armageddon.
"The Challenge" follows his exploits as he attempts to shed his reputation as a loose-living ladies' man, giving up cigarettes, booze and latenight partying, to settle into family life with his wife and newborn child.
Because the use of wreaths in Rome had been closely associated with pagan festivals, the early Roman Christians felt the need to separate themselves from their loose-living neighbors.
Jovinian and Rufinus, attacked in pamphlets, he deployed his attacks on hypocritical clergy and monks, loose-living women, and (in the regrettable Zeitgeist) Jews across his biblical commentaries, homilies, and letters.
His hatred of formalised religion was matched by his appetite for drink and loose-living. But he was probably more sceptic than atheist, a man whose sharp wit and wide experience made him unable to accept the often narrow, dogmatic piety of his day.
Anna Beer combines her academic credentials with the ability to tell a good story, combining extracts from original letters and diaries with a smattering of modern vernacular that helps to bring the characters to life -describing Elizabeth as someone who 'wasn't a morning person' and Sir Walter's loose-living fellow courtiers as an Elizabethan rat pack.
That's where the spluttering starts: With that kind of loose-living attitude, what would happen to moral standards?
What are your real dreams for them and your environment?' He described his own youth of crime, loose-living and prison, and then the growing realization that he was meant to live differently--and the community projects that resulted.
In conveying these secrets to his children, d'Aubigne ironically leaves himself without a textual heir, for he writes to his two daughters, Marie and Louise, and to his son Constant, whom he later repudiated for loose-living and apostasy.