flagitiousness
1flagitiousness — index atrocity, bad repute, crime Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
2Flagitiousness — Flagitious Fla*gi tious, a. [L. flagitiosus, fr. flagitium a shameful or disgraceful act, orig., a burning desire, heat of passion, from flagitare to demand hotly, fiercely; cf. flagrare to burn, E. flagrant.] 1. Disgracefully or shamefully… …
3flagitiousness — noun see flagitious …
4flagitiousness — See flagitiously. * * * …
5flagitiousness — (Roget s Thesaurus II) noun Degrading, immoral acts or habits: bestiality, corruption, depravity, immorality, perversion, turpitude, vice, villainousness, villainy, wickedness. See CLEAN …
6flagitiousness — fla·gi·tious·ness …
7flagitiousness — noun ( es) : the quality or state of being flagitious : corruption, vice, villainy …
8flagitious — adjective Etymology: Middle English flagicious, from Latin flagitiosus, from flagitium shameful thing Date: 14th century marked by scandalous crime or vice ; villainous • flagitiously adverb • flagitiousness noun …
9flagitious — flagitiously, adv. flagitiousness, n. /fleuh jish euhs/, adj. 1. shamefully wicked, as persons, actions, or times. 2. heinous or flagrant, as a crime; infamous. [1350 1400; ME flagicious < L flagitiosus, equiv. to flagiti(um) shame, scandal +… …
10crime — / krīm/ n [Middle French, from Latin crimen fault, accusation, crime] 1: conduct that is prohibited and has a specific punishment (as incarceration or fine) prescribed by public law compare delict, tort 2: an offense against public law …