Dissolute in a sentence as an adjective

You chill their spirit so they are dissolute, you lose something.

The great thing is that the suit as we know it started as the dress-up of dissolute dandies.

Thus, the cognitive dissonance between the quality of the work these people do and the need to see them as dissolute scum.

Two groups in particular that didn't like to see assets locked away were dissolute heirs and their creditors.

Witnessing the suffering of the dissolute validates the virtuous.

Some excerpts:He was a charming, damaged, charismatic, fiercely intelligent, dissolute individual, who lived entirely on his own terms.

A dissolute alcoholic and heavy drug user, when he is awakened for the final time he has sex with and subsequently\nmurders a clone of his daughter prior to committing *******.

Conservative messaging has drilled it into their heads that liberals are only interested in helping lazy, dishonest, dissolute, parasitic people, and that's not how they see themselves.

Given the choice between a spendthrift living a dissolute life of debauchery, and a monk who ceremoniously burns all his worldly possessions and lives in solitude, I suspect the economy prefers the spendthrift.

Just my own intuition says they probably were treated under existing vagrancy laws "Vagrancy laws took myriad forms, generally making it a crime to be poor, idle, dissolute, immoral, drunk, lewd, or suspicious.

“Obviously too foolish and dissolute to use safe Nestlé privatised water!” All babies are certified to have grown up in an environment with minimal quantities of artificial chemicals, electromagnetic radiation or modern allopathic medicines.“We never compromise on taste.

Dissolute definitions

adjective

unrestrained by convention or morality; "Congreve draws a debauched aristocratic society"; "deplorably dissipated and degraded"; "riotous living"; "fast women"

See also: debauched degenerate degraded dissipated libertine profligate riotous fast