A wretch is a miserable, vile, loathsome or despicable person. Disobedience is a refusal to obey laws, rules or directions - in simple terms a disobedient person is someone who doesn't do what they're told/supposed to do. So, a disobedient wretch is a miserable, despicable person who fails to do what they're told.
The plural of wretch is wretches.
disobiedent
Disobedient is the adjective form of disobedience.
It is a adjective describing something/someone who is stubbornly disobedient.
One obvious example is disobedient. There is also rebellious, obstinate, and mutinous.
Lord Capulet: "Hang thee, young baggage! Disobedient wretch!"Juliet: "Go, counsellor! Thou and my bosom henceforth shall be twain!"Oh, hang on, these show that Juliet is disobedient. This is as good description of her as its opposite.
The phrase "hang thee, young baggage, disobedient wretch! I tell thee what, get thee to church a Thursday or never after look me in the face" is a line from Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet." In this context, Lord Capulet is angrily confronting his daughter Juliet for her defiance and refusal to marry Paris. He is essentially saying that if she doesn't go to church to marry Paris on Thursday, she will be disowned and he will no longer recognize her. The intense language conveys his frustration and the societal pressures of obedience and familial duty.
The synonym of wretch is crash.
The plural of wretch is wretches.
Obedient, accepting, or behaving. Those words mean disobedient.
The plural of wretch is wretches.
The word wretch has one syllable.
Someone who is not submissive to authority, disobedient or rebellious
The plural form of the noun 'wretch' is wretches.
Capulet says this line to Juliet in Act 3, Scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet. He is angered by Juliet's disobedience and defiance of his wishes for her to marry Paris.
Can the poor wretch's corpse tell us anything?
Wretch - album - was created on 1991-09-23.