decadent - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of decadent in Hindi

  • अवनति का
  • पतनशील
  • पतनोन्मुख
  • क्षय होनेवाला
  • पतनो-मुख
  • पतित
  • ह्रासोन्‍मुख
  • ह्रासवादी
  • क्षयोन्‍मुख
  • क्षय होनेवाला मनुष्य
  • अवनति का व्यक्ति

decadent Definition

Adjective

  • characterized by or reflecting a state of moral or cultural decline.

Noun

  • a person who is luxuriously self-indulgent.

decadent Example

  • A savage and decadent people whom we are civilising by giving them our own vices. ( एक बर्बर और पतनशील लोग जिन्हें हम अपना दोष देकर सभ्य बना रहे हैं। )
  • They ended in the scepticism of despair or the prosaic superstitions of a decadent age. ( वे निराशा या पतनशील युग के अभियोगात्मक अंधविश्वासों के संदेह में समाप्त हो गए। )
  • Young boy slowly falling under the influence of a decadent uncle who is a transvestite. ( छोटा लड़का धीरे-धीरे एक पतनशील चाचा के प्रभाव में आ रहा है जो एक ट्रांसवेस्टाइट है। )
  • From the ruins emerge a variety of decadent schools of which two deserve mention. ( खंडहरों से कई तरह के पतनशील स्कूल निकलते हैं जिनमें से दो उल्लेख के पात्र हैं। )

More Sentence

  • Those values have more or less passed away, during this decadent cultural period in which we have lived.  
  • And, if you're feeling extra decadent, then adding a few driblets of essential oil will also give you a natural aromatherapy bath.  
  • Forget gourmet cuisine, decadent drug-soaked clubbing extravaganzas, and entertainment crossroads of the world for a moment.  
  • It was the most decadent time in German history, but also the most controlling and brutal time.  
  • History tells us that decadent cultures which have lost the will to fight do not survive.
  • If so, what must she now think of the treachery of her decadent fellow-countrymen?
  • America will never really be a decadent nation until its alarm clocks are jeweled and soft-voiced.
  • The taste for the black, the menacing, is the decadent appreciation of a too sheltered world.
  • For Billy, after all, was decadent according to the standards of the wilderness.
  • In the east he sees the decadent power of Spain: it has spoken no word of freedom for the blacks.
  • That the illustrators of this group were decadent is borne out in their subject-matter as well as in their methods.
  • It was with delight he had carried the documents which were to bring this new and vigorous blood into the home of his decadent master.
  • The suave strength of the transitional mouldings forms a most instructive contrast to the less effective minuteness of the decadent work.
  • Wills and records indicate that the Bradfords in general were of good repute and moved in the best society of that too decadent period.
  • Their Mohammedanism is decadent and has none of the virility which distinguishes those followers of Islam who dwell in western lands.
  • I have said that Aubrey Beardsley was the only true decadent of all the literary and artistic rebels of the eighteen-nineties.
  • There is a decadent form of chivalry or at least a sexuality that perpetuates conventions and interests that on the whole seem to interfere with progress.
  • To this extent it is a decadent art, ministering to the luxury of man, and to his progressive inclination to be pampered and have his appetite tickled.
  • It is this sad truth which fosters in most of us the belief that we live in a decadent age, and that the days of our youth were infinitely more seemly than those which we now endure.
  • The medicine-men recognize the fact that their ritual has been decadent for some time, and they regard it as foreordained that when all the ceremonies are forgotten the world will cease to exist.
  • The space which the compositions of these masters might have occupied is filled with comparatively worthless pictures, painted by the decadent artists, who lived during the eighteenth century.
  • a decaying, decadent Britain
  • a decadent soak in a scented bath