moral - use in sentences
Preposition: of
- story: Moral of the story: Always let your boss have the first say.
- tale: The morals of the tale have as much relevance now as they did in the 1600's when Cervantes was writing the novel.
Converse of object
- corrupt: First Corinthians 15:33 says, " Evil company corrupts good morals.
- reform: In 397 he became Bishop of Constantinople and really got stuck into trying to reform the morals of both clergy and people.
Adjective modifier
- strict: Can you be true to yourself, while adhering to the strict Islamic morals the country prides itself on?
- public: When it was originally published, six of the poems were banned as being offensive to public morals and Baudelaire received a fine.
- bad: You read 2 Peter 2 and you'll see how bad theology and bad morals go together.
- personal: Firstly, everything, from the protocol for catching a bus, to food, to personal morals or social requirements are completely different.
Modifies a noun
- dilemma: Buying flowers for your girlfriend or spending the money to upgrade your RAM is a moral dilemma.
- obligation: A moral obligation for the West to talk with Hamas.
- imperative: Recognition of our common humanity makes religious toleration a moral imperative.
- philosophy: Also offers a biography of Tolstoy, discussing the authors ' moral philosophy.
- panic: Given that there has been a " moral panic " cultivated in Greece regarding migrants, there is a well-founded suspicion for the above.
- judgment: He shifted the terminology of the debate from moral judgment to value judgment.
Modifying Another Word
- purely: Looking at the thing from a purely moral point of view, what can be said?
- strictly: She worries about the General's reaction to her, knowing how strictly moral he is.
- neither: Architects feel therefore neither moral nor physical power to protest over anything.
- merely: If you try to talk about a truth that's merely moral, people always think it's merely metaphorical.
- truly: It will be possible to be truly moral only in a world which has overcome these dichotomies.
- no: A year-old male i'll be at have no moral.
The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.
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