Dissipation
192. Dissipation (See also Debauchery.)
- Breitmann, Hans lax indulger. [Am. Lit.: Hans Breitmann’s Ballads ]
- Burley, John wasteful ne’er-do-well. [Br. Lit.: My Novel, Walsh Modern, 79]
- Camors leads selfish, shameless life. [Fr. Lit.: M. de Camors, Walsh Modern, 84]
- Carton, Sydney wasteful bohemian; does not use his talents. [Br. Lit.: A Tale of Two Cities ]
- Castlewood, Francis Esmond gambles away living. [Br. Lit.: Henry Esmond ]
- Christian II sybaritic king. [Fr. Lit.: Kings in Exile, Walsh Modern, 96]
- Chuzzlewit, Jonas dissipated, wasteful person. [Br. Lit.: Martin Chuzzlewit ]
- Clavering, Sir Francis dissipated gambling baronet. [Br. Lit.: Pendennis ]
- Dalgarno, Lord Malcolm of wasteful and ruinous; destroys several people. [Br. Lit.: Fortunes of Nigel ]
- Fitzgerald, F. Scott (1896–1940) American novelist whose works reflect a life of dissipation. [Am. Lit.: NCE, 957]
- Jeshurun citizens abandon God; give themselves up to luxury. [O.T.: Deuteronomy 32:15]
- Mite, Sir Matthew dissolute merchant; displays wealth ostentatiously. [Br. Lit.: The Nabob, Brewer Handbook, 713]
- Pheidippides his extravagant bets ruin father’s wealth. [Gk. Lit.: The Clouds ]
- prodigal son squanders share of money in reckless living. [N.T.: Luke 15:13]
dissipation
dis·si·pa·tion / ˌdisəˈpāshən/ • n. 1. dissipated living: a descent into drunkenness and sexual dissipation.2. squandering of money, energy, or resources: the dissipation of the country's mineral wealth. ∎ Physics loss of energy, esp. by its conversion into heat. ∎ scattering or dispersion: the complete dissipation of paint fumes.
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