Green’s Dictionary of Slang

deboshed adj.

mispron./sp. SE debauched, whether morally or in form of physical disorder.

[UK]James I Basilikon dōron 85: [T]hey being [...] also knowne to be deboshed and insolent liuers.
[UK]The treasurie of auncient and moderne times 667: But the good and vertuously disposed [...] are not comprehended amongest these deboshed women: And as for the voluptuous and immodest; they regarde not who knowes their loosenesse.
[UK]Beaumont & Fletcher Little French Lawyer II iii: Thy Lady, is a scurvy Lady, a shitten Lady [...] a deboshed Lady.
[UK]G. Du Vair [trans.] A buckler against adversitie 40: All things waxe tart in his Mind, as meat doth in a deboshed Stomake.
[UK]J. Reynolds God's revenge against murder 127: [A] lascivious Ladie, and two lewd and debosht young Gentlemen, who all very lamentably cast themselves away upon the Sylla of Fornication, and the Charybdis of Murther.
[UK]J. Taylor Taylors manifestation and iust vindication against Iosua Church n.p.: So you (Mr. Vermin) when you have been a litle toucht for your Rogury, and for your deboshed abuses, then you snarle, snap, bite and back-bite us that are the doers of iustice.
[UK]W. Sanderson Compleat history of the lives and reigns of Mary Queen of Scotland [etc] 3: [He] was of no reputation in his youth, being very deboshed and riotous, & having no meanes, maintained it by sordid and unworthy wayes.
[UK]E. Waterhouse A short narrative of the late dreadful fire in London 26: London [...] had not only a contest with the Fire to quench it, but also with the virulent vulgar, and the deboshed libertines nested in her.
[UK]L. Des Ecotais [trans.] Memoirs 37: [I]f your Father has been a Thief, a deboshed and a dissolute, shall you be obliged to be a Thief, a deboshed and a dissolute.
The whole printed acts of the General Assemblies of the Church of Scotland 47: [I]dle, unruly ones without calling, drunkards, and such like deboshed men [...] lying, slandering, and backbiting and breaking of promises.
Dly News (London) 1 Sept. 2/2: ‘Skinning-houses’ [where] many a poor deboshed sailor has been [...] stripped to the skin.
N. Lindsay Dust or Polish? 15: Mrs Dibble was in her morning state of sobriety, which is to say that, having had a few gins, her deboshed innards were temporarily stultified.