The meaning of third precept is that one's actions must never be motivated by desire of sensual pleasure.
The Pali text for third precept says:
Kāmesumicchācāra veramaṇī sikkhāpadaṃ samādiyāmi.
veramaṇī sikkhāpadaṃ samādiyāmi
is a standard phrase that means "I undertake the training rule to abstain from ..."
The key therefore is Kāmesumicchācāra
, or, parsed out, Kamesu-Micchacara
.
Kam-e-su
is usually translated as "sexual" and Miccha-cara
as "misconduct". Such a translation, however, is severely misreading a simple literal phrase.
Miccha
, the antonym of samma
, generally means "wrong", "low quality", "sloppy" and literally "opposite", "contrary". Cara
means "conduct", or literally "going about", "walking". So far so good.
Kama
, the root of kamesu
, is often translated "lust" or "sensual pleasure" but its more precise meaning is fondness (combining such elements as love, desire, and taking pleasure in) for an object of material senses -- in other words "sensual fondness" -- not sexual but sensual!
The key to understanding this phrase though is -e-su
in Kam-e-su
, which gives it the meaning of "out of".
Together, the phrase reads "Misbehaving out of sensual fondness" (or "Going astray out of ..."). This gives it a very different meaning than "sexual misconduct".
The idea is, when one's mind is obsessed by an object of sensual pleasure, one's ability to reason about results and side-effects of one's acts gets severely impaired. One is then prone to making bad decisions, creating suffering for oneself and others. Instead, one should never act out of mere "sensual fondness"! One should act out of right understanding, out of compassion etc.