Word
Of
The
Day
libertine
libertine \LIB-er-teen\
noun
A libertine is in broad terms a person who is unrestrained by convention or morality. More narrowly, the word describes someone who leads an immoral life.
// The legend of
Don Juan depicts him as a playboy and
libertine.
See the entry >
Examples:
"As horrifying as some of the sins of Victorian scholarship may have been, it would have been anathema to these students of classical philosophy to simply throw out Plato. But that's what some of their modern inheritors have tried to do. … It's worth noting that we might not have Plato's work at all, were it not carefully studied and preserved by the Islamic scholars (hardly
libertines themselves) of the medieval period." — R. Bruce Anderson,
The Ledger (Lakeland, Florida), 1 Feb. 2026
Did you know?
"I only ask to be free," says Mr. Skimpole in Charles Dickens'
Bleak House. His words would undoubtedly have appealed to the world's first libertines. The word
libertine comes from the Latin
lībertīnus, a word used in early writings of Roman antiquity to describe a formerly enslaved person who had been set free (the Roman term for an emancipated person was the Latin
lībertus). Middle English speakers used
libertine to refer to a
freedman, but by the late 1500s its meaning was extended to freethinkers, both religious and secular, and it later came to imply that an individual was a little too unrestrained, especially in moral affairs. The likely Latin root of
libertine is
līber, the ultimate source of our word
liberty.