লোচচামি Meaning in English
/Noun/ Licentiousness; lasciviousness; philandering.
এমন আরো কিছু শব্দ
লোচচালোগণক
লোকোত্তর প্রতিভা
লোকে লোকারণ্য
লোকে বলে
লোকে বলাবলি করে
লোকে জানে
লোকে গিজগিজ করা
লোকায়ত রাষ্ট্র
লোকায়ত
লোকালয়ে মুখ দেখানো
লোকালয়
লোকারণ্য
লোকায়ত রাষ্ট্র
লোকায়ত
লোচচামি এর ইংরেজি অর্থের উদাহরণ
instead of bachelorette parties due to the latter's association with licentiousness in some countries since the 1980s.
recently adopted Lutheranism, and the laws were enacted to reduce moral licentiousness and sexual lasciviousness in the country.
accused da Ponte of having betrayed the Christian faith through his licentiousness and publication of criticisms against the church (influenced by Casanova).
Piety and licentiousness are both to be found .
they are regarded negatively, they may be called "sexual licence" or "licentiousness".
a reputation for heavy alcohol and drug use or a general culture of licentiousness at the expense of educational credibility and integrity.
Hostius Quadra was a Roman slave-owner famed for his sexual licentiousness.
Elizabeth Cresswell, it sought to mock the perceived extravagance and licentiousness of Castlemaine and the royal court.
523f) provides a vivid description of the revelry and licentiousness of her outdoor festival where tents were pitched or bowers built from.
the Greeks and Romans associated frogs with fertility, harmony, and licentiousness.
due to Article 301 of China's 1997 Criminal Law which bans “group licentiousness”.
in prison for organising wife-swapping events, breaking the "group licentiousness law" (聚众淫乱罪).
the hope that she would turn the hearts of women and girls against licentiousness and towards chastity.
Wycherley's comic genius are the most dazzling; also, it is there that the licentiousness is the most astonishing.
retinue, however, they had a reputation for criminal behaviour and licentiousness, as records from the Ottoman provinces and the tales of Western travellers.
but the opposition of the nobility, which accused him of avarice and licentiousness, resulted in his being temporarily deposed in 1523 and 1525.