Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In fact, it was nothing more nor less than the debauching of a soul."
Accordingly they commenced by an insidious debauching of the public mind.
But this debauching of a decent one was more compelling than anything I had ever experienced."
Ready for some serious debauching?"
And there will be untold parties, private dinners, photo ops and late-night debauching.
Mr. Reich's literary license does not portend the fall of the Republic or the debauching of the memoir form.
They have their memories and their inherited fears of inflation and the debauching of their currency to contend with.
The Republic was associated with virtue and austerity, so that society could not hope to be improved until the regime responsible for this fearful debauching of the public mind was overthrown.
He may have respected Jesus, but he was more dazzled by Babylon, whose excessive feasting, dancing and general all-round debauching gave the Barnum in him something he could sink his teeth into.
Kashyap wanted to make his own version of Devdas to reflect the original novel but through 2008 mores, with the lead character of Devdas as a debauching, hypocritical sensualist, who is self-destructive without knowing it.
Debauched by what you will, or in need of no debauching, behold them, long files of them, their consignment broken, arrive, headed by their Sergeants, on the 26th day of June, at the Palais Royal!
Here and there we heard news of Sicily: that Dion was still in power; that Dionysios had not tried to return, though much detested in Lokri for his beastly drunkenness and debauching of the local girls.
Frederick II objected to the election of Bonaventura due to his "persecution" of the University of Paris while legate to France, his alleged debauching of Queen Blanche of Castile, and his role in the dispute between Gregory IX and the emperor.
What I shall say myself I. don't know. . . 'Biting the joint of his thumb he darted a furious look from under his eyebrows, and Jack had a moral certainty that the financial setback, misfortune, disaster, or whatever it was, affected him far more than the debauching of his wife.