decadence 的定义
- the act or process of falling into an inferior condition or state; deterioration; decay: Some historians hold that the fall of Rome can be attributed to internal decadence.
- moral degeneration or decay; turpitude.
- unrestrained or excessive self-indulgence.
- the decadent movement in literature.
decadence 近义词
perversion; deterioration of morality
更多decadence例句
- Mirza Ghalib, the ultimate authority on Urdu poetry, was also an authority on mangoes, weaving entire ditties around their decadence.
- At my meal, that luxury came through not just in the decadence but in how tailored it was to each person around the table.
- I try to tell the unvarnished truth about the decadence in our market-driven universities!
- Seeking can call it sugaring, with its implications of frivolity and decadence, but it’s hard to attribute the site’s popularity to anything but financial hardship.
- Our mockery of celebworld helps us evade the soul-crushing decadence concealed within.
- Within days, the anti-Western line drawn to connect the dots of supposed Western decadence reached theaters and movie theaters.
- Many accused party leaders of excessive wealth and decadence filled with liquor and women.
- The decadence of it at 10 in the morning, it just feels like the perfect reward!
- In both films, these vehicular behemoths are emblems of our current decadence.
- This style of the decadence is the "dernier mot" of Verbe, summoned to express all and to venture to the very extremes.
- Unlike those feathered Romans of the Decadence, we moderns settle for one meal at a sitting, and let it digest in peace.
- So long as England produces men of this metal she need not fear the decadence of the race.
- They had reached the period of decadence, and were often heard boasting of the illustrious Charlotte.
- It is the fruit of a decadence, not the mature product of a full-blown art, which has taken centuries to grow and ripen.