释义 |
moralism
mor·al·ism M0417800 (môr′ə-lĭz′əm, mŏr′-)n.1. A conventional moral maxim or attitude.2. The act or practice of moralizing.3. Often undue concern for morality.moralism (ˈmɒrəˌlɪzəm) n1. the habit or practice of moralizing2. a moral saying3. (Philosophy) the practice of moral principles without reference to religionmor•al•ism (ˈmɔr əˌlɪz əm, ˈmɒr-) n. 1. the habit of moralizing. 2. a moral maxim. 3. emphasis, esp. undue emphasis, on morality. 4. the practice of morality, as distinct from religion. [1820–30] moralismthe practice of morality, as distinct from religion. — moralist, n. — moralistic, adj.See also: EthicsThesaurusNoun | 1. | moralism - a moral maximaxiom, maxim - a saying that is widely accepted on its own merits | | 2. | moralism - judgments about another person's morality; "he could not stand her hectoring moralism"value judgement, value judgment - an assessment that reveals more about the values of the person making the assessment than about the reality of what is assessed | EncyclopediaSeemoralitymoralism
Words related to moralismnoun a moral maximRelated Wordsnoun judgments about another person's moralityRelated Words- value judgement
- value judgment
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