Synonym: blood, debauched, degenerate, degraded, dissipated, dissolute, extravagant, fast, libertine, prodigal, rake, rakehell, riotous, rip, roue, spendthrift, squanderer. Similar words: profligacy, alligator, obligation, frigate, navigate, mitigate, instigate, castigate. Meaning: ['prɑflɪgət /'prɒ-] n. 1. a dissolute man in fashionable society 2. a recklessly extravagant consumer. adj. 1. recklessly wasteful 2. unrestrained by convention or morality.
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1. She is well-known for her profligate spending habits.
2. Their profligate lifestyle resulted in bankruptcy.
3. This profligate recipe for survival is used by many animals of many kinds.
4. Although the sources are not profligate with information, it is possible to reach a more differentiated picture.
5. He was an out-and-out profligate, darting from one partner to the next.
6. The implication of this is that the more profligate councils will not be re-elected.
7. A persistent critic of profligate government, he now has his chance to trim the deficit.
8. Why do you bring your profligate companions here?
9. He is a careless profligate.
10. He is wicked and profligate.
11. The young profligate needs to be controlled.
12. It is not: the frugal depend on the profligate.
12. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and create good sentences.
13. Similarly Americans have been profligate in the handling of mineral resources.
14. As investors focus on that gap, the most profligate rich countries, such as Britain, will suffer.
15. The region's profligate economies will struggle for longer as austerity kicks in.
16. In her profligate life, she lost all sense of decency.
17. Would not that be threatened only by the advent of a Labour Government, with their profligate spending plans?
18. Once again, the immediate issues were the royal prerogative and the high tax burdens entailed by the monarch's profligate spending.
19. How can we make our use of praise discriminating and therefore meaningful, rather than profligate or ritualized?
20. Mead also called on agencies to combat the myth that agencies are over-profitable and profligate in paying employees.
21. In her day at the parsonage the consumption of butter and eggs was not so profligate.
22. At a time when vast tracts were unsettled, it was all too easy for governments to be profligate.
23. The Germans want a different sort of centralisation, built on rules to punish the profligate.
24. German public opinion is firmly set against the public purse to help the profligate Greeks.
25. This young man had all the inclination to be a profligate of the first water.
26. But like all the most successful illicit traders, China is ideologically profligate in its relations.
27. Lydia is a girl who follows exotic things, handsome man and is somehow a little profligate.
28. Russia (-11%) and Japan (-9%) have contracted their energy use the most, but the US – which is by far the most profligate power user in the world – reduced its emissions by nearly 500m tonnes in 2009.
29. Yet they have something in common: both involve the profligate deployment of resources.
30. Thus the crisis punishes the frugal more than the profligate.
More similar words: profligacy, alligator, obligation, frigate, navigate, mitigate, instigate, castigate, investigate, circumnavigate, propagate, promulgate, walk of life, the cost of living, standard of living, flight, hooligan, oligarchy, flight path, irrigation, litigation, mitigation, investigator, investigation, due process of law, profit, prodigal, profile, profane, profound.