Prodigal
51prodigal son — karališkasis ešerys statusas T sritis zoologija | vardynas taksono rangas rūšis atitikmenys: lot. Rachycentron canadum angl. black kingfish; cobia; crab eater; prodigal son; runner; sergeant fish rus. канадус; кобия; нигрита; рыба сержант ryšiai …
52prodigal — prod·i·gal || prÉ‘dɪgl / prÉ’d n. extravagant person, lavish spender; spendthrift, squanderer, one who wastes money adj. generous, lavish; abundant, plentiful; wasteful, tending to squander money …
53prodigal — I. a. Wasteful, lavish, extravagant, profuse. II. n. Spendthrift, waster, squanderer …
54prodigal — adj 1. profligate, wasteful, spendthrift, dissipative, squandering, improvident, thriftless; extravagant, immoderate, inordinate, overweening, exorbitant, excessive, unwarranted; munificent, generous, open handed, free handed. 2. abundant,… …
55prodigal — prod·i·gal …
56prodigal — adjective Syn: wasteful, extravagant, spendthrift Ant: thrifty …
57prodigal — a. wasteful; extravagant; lavish; generous; n. such person; spendthrift. ♦ prodigality, n …
58prodigal — Ho omāunauna, uha uha …
59prodigal — Wasteful; extravagant. A spendthrift. In civil law, a person who, though of full age, is incapable of managing his affairs, and of the obligations which attend them, in consequence of his bad conduct, and for whom a curator is therefore appointed …
60prodigal — A spendthrift; an unthrift. Under the Roman law, if a man by notorious prodigality was in danger of wasting his estate, he was looked upon as non compos, and committed to the care of curators or tutors by the praetor. But under the common law,… …