shamelessness in English

noun

['shame·less·ness || 'ʃeɪmlɪsnɪs]

brazenness, impudence; lack of shame, lack of principles

Use "shamelessness" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "shamelessness" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "shamelessness", or refer to the context using the word "shamelessness" in the English Dictionary.

1. The New Thayer’s Greek-English Lexicon defines the Greek term as “unbridled lust, . . . outrageousness, shamelessness, insolence.”

2. Synonyms for Blatancy include barefacedness, brazenness, conspicuousness, flagrancy, obviousness, ostentation, overtness, shamelessness, enormity and egregiousness

3. Nouns for Ashamed include Ashamedness, shamash, shamashim, shame, shamee, shamees, shamefacedness, shamefacednesses, shamefulness, shamefulnesses, shamelessness

4. Word family (noun) shame shamefulness shamelessness (adjective) Ashamed ≠ unAshamed shameful shameless (verb) shame (adverb) shamefully ≠ shamelessly From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English a‧shamed /əˈʃeɪmd/ ●●○ S3 adjective [ not before noun] 1

5. Lying there banished , glowing with shamelessness , is the bloated child of gesture politics , or the test - tube pro - duct of political correctness , with a reduced blackmarket value of merely Rs 1 lakh .

6. Examples of Chesty in a Sentence Recent Examples on the Web Parodying a president who already flirts with self-parody isn’t easy, but Cauvin nailed the Chesty voice, the malapropisms and the utter shamelessness

7. Brazenness: 1 n behavior marked by a bold defiance of the proprieties and lack of shame Synonyms: shamelessness Type of: boldness , daring , hardihood , hardiness the trait of being willing to undertake things that involve risk or danger

8. For the French sense evolution from "bold" to "lewd," compare Old French baudise "ardor, joy, elation, act of boldness, presumption;" baudie "elation, high spirits," fole baudie "Bawdry, shamelessness." The Old French word also is the source of French baudet "donkey," in Picardy dialect "loose woman."