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Meaning of अनैतिक in English

  • A basket made of rushes, used chiefly for containing figs and raisins.
  • The quantity of raisins -- about thirty-two, fifty-six, or seventy-five pounds, -- contained in a frail.
  • A rush for weaving baskets.
  • Easily broken; fragile; not firm or durable; liable to fail and perish; easily destroyed; not tenacious of life; weak; infirm.
  • Tender.
  • Liable to fall from virtue or be led into sin; not strong against temptation; weak in resolution; also, unchaste; -- often applied to fallen women.
  • Not moral; inconsistent with rectitude, purity, or good morals; contrary to conscience or the divine law; wicked; unjust; dishonest; vicious; licentious; as, an immoral man; an immoral deed.
  • In an immoral manner; wickedly.
  • Indifferent to obligation or duty.
  • Not officious; not civil or attentive.
  • Regardless of natural obligation; contrary to natural duty; unkind; -- commonly said of a testament made without regard to natural obligation, or by which a child is unjustly deprived of inheritance.
  • A manumitted slave; a freedman; also, the son of a freedman.
  • One of a sect of Anabaptists, in the fifteenth and early part of the sixteenth century, who rejected many of the customs and decencies of life, and advocated a community of goods and of women.
  • One free from restraint; one who acts according to his impulses and desires; now, specifically, one who gives rein to lust; a rake; a debauchee.
  • A defamatory name for a freethinker.
  • Free from restraint; uncontrolled.
  • Dissolute; licentious; profligate; loose in morals; as, libertine principles or manners.
  • Being without principles; especially, being without right moral principles; also, characterized by absence of principle.
  • Consisting of, or partaking of the nature of, ambrosia; delighting the taste or smell; delicious.
  • Divinely excellent or beautiful.
  • Anthropophagous.
  • of Anglicize
  • Alleviating pain.
  • A medicine to alleviate pain; an anodyne.
  • of Castigate
  • Punitive in order to amendment; corrective.
  • An instrument formerly used to punish and correct arrant scolds; -- called also a ducking stool, or trebucket.
  • One who meanly shrinks from danger; an arrant coward; a poltroon.
  • Meanly shrinking from danger; cowardly; dastardly.
  • To dastardize.
  • To famish; to starve.
  • Pertaining to exile or banishment, esp. to that of the Jews in Babylon.
  • of Forlese
  • Deserted; abandoned; lost.
  • Destitute; helpless; in pitiful plight; wretched; miserable; almost hopeless; desperate.
  • A lost, forsaken, or solitary person.
  • A forlorn hope; a vanguard.
  • Relating to a fornix.
  • Much worn.
  • See Embalm.
  • Not warlike or martial.
  • Not consisting of matter; incorporeal; spiritual; disembodied.
  • Of no substantial consequence; without weight or significance; unimportant; as, it is wholly immaterial whether he does so or not.
  • One who believes in or professes, immaterialism.
  • Want of worth; demerit.
  • Not methodical; without method or systematic arrangement; without order or regularity; confused.
  • Not eloquent; not fluent, graceful, or pathetic; not persuasive; as, ineloquent language.
  • To inter with funeral rites; to bury.
  • Containing praise or eulogy; encomiastic; laudatory.
  • Not enduring proof or trial; not of standard purity or fineness; disallowed; rejected.
  • Abandoned to punishment; hence, morally abandoned and lost; given up to vice; depraved.
  • Of or pertaining to one who is given up to wickedness; as, reprobate conduct.
  • One morally abandoned and lost.
  • To disapprove with detestation or marks of extreme dislike; to condemn as unworthy; to disallow; to reject.
  • To abandon to punishment without hope of pardon.
  • Spasmodic.
  • Of, pertaining to, or designating, a certain style of letters used in ancient manuscripts, esp. in Greek and Latin manuscripts. The letters are somewhat rounded, and the upstrokes and downstrokes usually have a slight inclination. These letters were used as early as the 1st century b. c., and were seldom used after the 10th century a. d., being superseded by the cursive style.
  • An uncial letter.
  • That can be passed over in a single course; -- said of a curve when the coordinates of the point on the curve can be expressed as rational algebraic functions of a single parameter /.
  • Having no moral perception, quality, or relation; involving no idea of morality; -- distinguished from both moral and immoral.
  • Excessively fond of, or submissive to, a wife; being a dependent husband.

English usage of अनैतिक

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