VOLUPTUARY - traducción al árabe
Diclib.com
Diccionario ChatGPT
Ingrese una palabra o frase en cualquier idioma 👆
Idioma:

Traducción y análisis de palabras por inteligencia artificial ChatGPT

En esta página puede obtener un análisis detallado de una palabra o frase, producido utilizando la mejor tecnología de inteligencia artificial hasta la fecha:

  • cómo se usa la palabra
  • frecuencia de uso
  • se utiliza con más frecuencia en el habla oral o escrita
  • opciones de traducción
  • ejemplos de uso (varias frases con traducción)
  • etimología

VOLUPTUARY - traducción al árabe


VOLUPTUARY         
BRITISH THOROUGHBRED RACEHORSE

ألاسم

شَبِق ; شَهْوان ; شَهْوانِيّ ; مُنْغَمِسٌ في المَلَذَّات

الصفة

شَبِق ; شَهْوان ; شَهْوانِيّ ; مُنْغَمِسٌ في المَلَذَّات

voluptuary         
BRITISH THOROUGHBRED RACEHORSE
اسْم : الشهوانيّ . المنغمس في الشهوات
voluptuary         
BRITISH THOROUGHBRED RACEHORSE
شهوانى ، محب اللذات

Definición

voluptuary
n.
Sensualist, epicure, man of pleasure, Sybarite.

Wikipedia

Voluptuary
| race = Nursery Plate (1880)Leicester Christmas Handicap Hurdle (1883)Grand National (1884)
Ejemplos de uso de VOLUPTUARY
1. And, of course, he led the life of a voluptuary when not playing.
2. The Marquis, as he is called (suggesting, of course, the Marquis de Sade), is a parodic evil aesthete and voluptuary with his monocle and beard, his gifts of marrons glacés and hothouse flowers, and his penchant for quoting the juicier bits of Baudelaire and De Sade.
3. For whilst we would neither seek to create nor to gratify a prurient appetite for scandal, in relation to a subject with respect to which that appetite is so easily excited as the vices or follies of the great, we do feel that it is a circumstance which strongly conduces to the welfare and interest of a nation, when the monarch, instead of being an insulated and selfish voluptuary, is known to be constant and unostentatious in the fulfilment of domestic duties, and the natural displayof tender and virtuous affections.
4. With Byron‘s wife, Annabella Milbanke (of whose sanctimony the poet quips, "She would make Cromwell look like a backsliding voluptuary"), he borrows Jane Austen‘s acerbic quill: "In all there was about her a quality of quiet self– containment that could not fail to elicit admiration, even where it did not inspire affection." (There is an even more obvious homage to Austen later, when Annabella notes, "[S]he must admit it as a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man not in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.") After the poets make their grand entrance, the novel encompasses enough love affairs and tragedy for a dozen bodice–rippers, without ever losing its clear–eyed intelligence.