adulterer

অগম্যাগামী
definition
noun
By the late eighteenth century, New England law enforcers arrested few fornicators or adulterers , though premarital and extramarital sex had hardly disappeared.
a person who commits adultery.
translation of 'adulterer'
ব্যভিচারী
noun
অগম্যাগামী,
উপসেবক,
ব্যভিচারী পুরূষ
example
As long as the 'adulterer' was discreet and the wife either didn't know what was going on or was willing to pretend she didn't know, everybody else also pretended not to know.
Contemporary chroniclers mainly describe her as an 'adulterer' and temptress.
‘Strike the adulteress and the 'adulterer' one hundred times’ may seem harsh but it is certainly not sexist.
All it would prove is that he was an 'adulterer' who often cheated on his wife.
For example, the piece on adultery dealt with the son of an 'adulterer' … and on how much the sins of the father had blighted his life and his relationships with other people.
As Gene points out, adultery has already become so widespread that the prosecution of 'adulterers' is now unheard of, even if there is no effort underway to legalize such behavior.
By the late eighteenth century, New England law enforcers arrested few fornicators or 'adulterers' , though premarital and extramarital sex had hardly disappeared.
Adam is seeing a married woman and I did not raise my sons to be 'adulterers' .
Under the cloak of anonymity, lovers, 'adulterers' and closet gamblers were free to behave appallingly.
Infidelity is likewise immoral, but do we really want to throw 'adulterers' in jail?
Tensions erupted when one company's officers and troops accused their counterparts in the other unit of not restraining the two 'adulterers' .
In Jean Renoir's magnificent, near morbid class structure comedy The Rules of the Game, we learn that the most insular of communities, the supposedly noble aristocracy, is filled with liars, cheats, and unabashed 'adulterers' .
And, to make things worse, the two 'adulterers' are trouncing the two cuckolds, their easy victory in the game somehow paralleling their upper hand in the complicated emotional relationships.
Legislators stopped short of making adultery illegal but will consider making 'adulterers' liable to compensate their spouses in divorce settlements.
As the law of 1580 prescribed a penalty of 50 years of banishment for 'adulterers' , he was apparently convicted of adultery rather than incest.
In War and Peace, the two chief couples achieve in marriage the supreme happiness that the 'adulterers' and other lovers cannot; their initial erotic transports fade into comfortable habit but remain the basis of a solid and lasting love.
Its elegance lured virtuous men and women to mingle ‘promiscuously’ with the gamblers, prostitutes, and 'adulterers' who still inhabited the night.
The film shows LaBute's low opinion of the relations between the sexes, but Marber's four criss-crossing 'adulterers' are simply fickle and valueless, rather than possessing the conscious cruelty of LaBute's males.
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