- A
spendthrift (also
profligate or prodigal) is
someone who is
extravagant and
recklessly wasteful with money,
often to a
point where the
spending climbs...
- first-team pay in
excess of £10m ($13.8m) per year. However,
years of
profligate spending under the
leadership of
Josep Maria Bartomeu (president between...
-
which required him to keep
order among the many new
bodies and
prevent profligate spending that
strained relations as well as finances. Cromwell's reforms...
- to the
monarchy in general. The
French libelles accused her of
being profligate, promiscuous,
having illegitimate children, and
harboring sympathies for...
-
luxury goods from England,
paying for them by
exporting tobacco. His
profligate spending combined with low
tobacco prices left him £1,800 in debt by 1764...
- Chapter) of the
Skanda Purana recounts the
remarkable story of Vahika, a
profligate and
unrepentant sinner, who is
killed by a
tiger in the forest. His soul...
- how my
Irish friend and I behaved.
Imagine to
yourself everything most
profligate and
shocking in the way of
dancing and
sitting down together." Austen...
- Wilmington,
Michael (5
January 2003). "Polanski's 'Pianist' may put '
profligate dwarf' in
better light".
Chicago Tribune.
Retrieved 25
November 2012....
-
mauled by
ferocious ****es – this is the
punishment of the
violently profligate who, "possessed by a
depraved p****ion [...]
dissipated their goods for...
- He then
established his
residence in
Carlton House,
where he
lived a
profligate life.
Animosity developed between the
prince and his father, who desired...