Word Meanings - TURPITUDE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Inherent baseness or vileness of principle, words, or actions; shameful wickedness; depravity. Shak.
Related words: (words related to TURPITUDE)
- WORDSMAN
One who deals in words, or in mere words; a verbalist. "Some speculative wordsman." H. Bushnell. - BASENESS
The quality or condition of being base; degradation; vileness. I once did hold it a baseness to write fair. Shak. - DEPRAVITY
The stae of being depraved or corrupted; a vitiated state of moral character; general badness of character; wickedness of mind or heart; absence of religious feeling and principle. Total depravity. See Original sin, and Calvinism. Syn. - INHERENTLY
By inherence; inseparably. Matter hath inherently and essentially such an internal energy. Bentley. - SHAMEFUL
1. Bringing shame or disgrace; injurious to reputation; disgraceful. His naval preparations were not more surprising than his quick and shameful retreat. Arbuthnot. 2. Exciting the feeling of shame in others; indecent; as, a shameful picture; a - WICKEDNESS
1. The quality or state of being wicked; departure from the rules of the divine or the moral law; evil disposition or practices; immorality; depravity; sinfulness. God saw that the wickedness of man was great. Gen. vi. 5. Their inward part is very - INHERENT
Permanently existing in something; inseparably attached or connected; naturally pertaining to; innate; inalienable; as, polarity is an inherent quality of the magnet; the inherent right of men to life, liberty, and protection. "A most - PRINCIPLE
Any original inherent constituent which characterizes a substance, or gives it its essential properties, and which can usually be separated by analysis; -- applied especially to drugs, plant extracts, etc. Cathartine is the bitter, purgative - SERVILENESS
Quality of being servile; servility. - SWORDSMANSHIP
The state of being a swordsman; skill in the use of the sword. Cowper. - SWORDSMAN
1. A soldier; a fighting man. 2. One skilled of a use of the sword; a professor of the science of fencing; a fencer. - HIGH-PRINCIPLED
Possessed of noble or honorable principles. - UNPRINCIPLE
To destroy the moral principles of. - UNPRINCIPLED
Being without principles; especially, being without right moral principles; also, characterized by absence of principle. -- Un*prin"ci*pled*ness, n.