All libertinism synonyms
lib·er·tin·ism
L l noun libertinism
- anarchy — If you describe a situation as anarchy, you mean that nobody seems to be paying any attention to rules or laws.
- animalism — satisfaction of or preoccupation with physical matters; sensuality
- arrogance — the quality or state of being arrogant; overbearing pride or self-importance
- audacity — Audacity is audacious behaviour.
- boldness — not hesitating or fearful in the face of actual or possible danger or rebuff; courageous and daring: a bold hero.
- complacency — Complacency is being complacent about a situation.
- debauchery — You use debauchery to refer to the drinking of alcohol or to sexual activity if you disapprove of it or regard it as excessive.
- disorder — lack of order or regular arrangement; confusion: Your room is in utter disorder.
- dissoluteness — indifferent to moral restraints; given to immoral or improper conduct; licentious; dissipated.
- dissolution — the act or process of resolving or dissolving into parts or elements.
- effrontery — shameless or impudent boldness; barefaced audacity: She had the effrontery to ask for two free samples.
- forwardness — overreadiness to push oneself forward; lack of appropriate modesty; presumption; boldness.
- impropriety — the quality or condition of being improper; incorrectness.
- lawlessness — contrary to or without regard for the law: lawless violence.
- laxity — the state or quality of being lax; looseness.
- licentiousness — sexually unrestrained; lascivious; libertine; lewd.
- presumptuousness — full of, characterized by, or showing presumption or readiness to presume in conduct or thought, as by saying or doing something without right or permission.
- prodigality — the quality or fact of being prodigal; wasteful extravagance in spending.
- profligacy — shameless dissoluteness.
- refractoriness — hard or impossible to manage; stubbornly disobedient: a refractory child.
- relaxation — abatement or relief from bodily or mental work, effort, application, etc.
- sauciness — impertinent; insolent: a saucy remark; a saucy child.
- self-indulgence — indulging one's own desires, passions, whims, etc., especially without restraint.
- sensuality — sensual nature: the sensuality of Keats's poetry.
- slackness — not tight, taut, firm, or tense; loose: a slack rope.
- temerity — reckless boldness; rashness.
- unrestraint — absence of or freedom from restraint.
- unruliness — not submissive or conforming to rule; ungovernable; turbulent; intractable; refractory; lawless: an unruly class; an unruly wilderness.
- unwanton — done, shown, used, etc., maliciously or unjustifiably: a wanton attack; wanton cruelty.
- gluttony — excessive eating and drinking.
- immoderation — lack of moderation.
- irresponsibility — said, done, or characterized by a lack of a sense of responsibility: His refusal to work shows him to be completely irresponsible.
- looseness — free or released from fastening or attachment: a loose end.
- relaxed — being free of or relieved from tension or anxiety: in a relaxed mood.
- wildness — living in a state of nature; not tamed or domesticated: a wild animal; wild geese.
- license — formal permission from a governmental or other constituted authority to do something, as to carry on some business or profession.
- licence — license.
- excess — An amount of something that is more than necessary, permitted, or desirable.