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Webster 1913 Edition


Flagitious

Fla-gi′tious

,
Adj.
[L.
flagitiosus
, fr.
flagitium
a shameful or disgraceful act, orig., a burning desire, heat of passion, from
flagitare
to demand hotly, fiercely; cf.
flagrare
to burn, E.
flagrant
.]
1.
Disgracefully or shamefully criminal; grossly wicked; scandalous; shameful; – said of acts, crimes, etc.
Debauched principles and
flagitious
practices.
I. Taylor.
2.
Guilty of enormous crimes; corrupt; profligate; – said of persons.
Pope.
Fla-gi′tious-ly
,
adv.
Fla-gi′tious-ness
,
Noun.
A sentence so
flagitiously
unjust.
Macaulay.

Webster 1828 Edition


Flagitious

FLAGI'TIOUS

,
Adj.
[L. flagitium, a scandalous crime, probably from the root of flagrant.]
1.
Deeply criminal; grossly wicked; villainous; atrocious; scandalous; as a flagitious action or crime.
2.
Guilty of enormous crimes; corrupt; wicked; as a flagitious person.
3.
Marked or infected with scandalous crimes or vices; as flagitious times.

Definition 2024


flagitious

flagitious

English

Adjective

flagitious (comparative more flagitious, superlative most flagitious)

  1. (literary) (of people) Guilty of terrible crimes; wicked, criminal.
    • 1716 Nov 7th, quoted from 1742, probably Alexander Pope, God's Revenge Against Punning, from Miscellanies, 3rd volume, page 227:
      This young Nobleman was not only a flagitious Punster himself, but was accessary to the Punning of others, by Consent, by Provocation, by Connivance, and by Defence of the Evil committed […].
  2. (literary) Extremely brutal or wicked; heinous, monstrous.
    • 1959 (1985), Rex Stout, "Assault on a Brownstone", Death Times Three, page 186:
      As he entered he boomed: "Monstrous! Flagitious!"

Synonyms

See also