অপব্যয়ী, অপচয়ী, অমিতব্যয়ী, প্রচুর, উড়নচণ্ডে, উড়নচড়ে
(1) Recklessly wasteful.
(2) Very generous.
(3) Marked by rash extravagance.
(4) Wasteful.
(5) Luxurious.
(6) Profuse.
(1) A recklessly extravagant consumer.
(2) Person who spends a lot.
(1) Even the sport most apt to have a prodigal star, tennis, rarely has a 19-year-old dominate in the men's game.
(2) The prodigal returns home to marry his high school sweetheart and to mind the store, but the lure of rock and roll ultimately calls him away from responsibility.
(3) The hand is self - addressed as no other organ in the animal kingdom, and it has a prodigal inventiveness permitting choice also unmatched in other living creatures.
(4) My mother was back - eight months with me and another five back home, and she had returned like the prodigal , no longer self-indulgent in her grief.
(5) This look says that the wearers, whatever they do or say, must be treated like prodigal children rather than responsible adults, and exempts them from all the usual pressures of conformity.
(6) But the 21-year old heroin-addicted punk rocker from southern England wasn't the only prodigal .
(7) Call me reckless, prodigal even, but I've been spending up big on electricity.
(8) Go hard on those sugar farmers, or should I say, go hard on that prodigal federal government.
(9) The Tories are non-starters as a party of government and the Lib Dems aspire to be more prodigal spendthrifts than Gordon Brown.
(10) As Mauss perceptively noted, the gift economy enhances the authority of the most prodigal giver, not of the most aggressive hoarder.
(11) Epistle III, to Lord Bathurst, deals with the use of riches, which is understood by few, neither the avaricious nor the prodigal deriving happiness from them.
(12) The film revolves around a prodigal father figure, Royal Tenenbaum, played by Gene Hackman auditioning for the Oscars.
(13) A second concern is the u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510deficit doesn't matter attitudeu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb being bandied about by certain prodigal U.S. politicians.
(14) Jaded by the excesses of a prodigal youth in English society at home and on the Continent, he is at first merely anxious to relieve his ennui by touring the countryside.
(15) This includes not just creditors but, above all, the little man who is forced to keep his meager savings in the form of cash, i.e., paper money open to plunder by the prodigal which is the consortium of the banks and the government.
(16) At this point, Leih Tseih reveals his prodigal past to Ku Yum.
(17) Above all, the Executive must curb its own prodigal spending.
(18) Far from the wanton prodigal that she had seemed, Sarah turns out to be a faithful keeper of promises - even when they impinge upon (what she had believed to be) her greatest happiness.
(19) And I received the welcome of a prodigal in my house.
(20) Though he never mentions him, Tony Hendra has much in common with another prodigal , a man born two generations before him: Malcolm Muggeridge.
wasteful
generous
abounding in
spendthrift
profligate
economical
frugal
penny-pinching
Careful
Thrifty
Modest
Poor