moral(a)

listen to the pronunciation of moral(a)
English - Turkish

Definition of moral(a) in English Turkish dictionary

moral
manevi

Tom manevi destek kullanabildi. - Tom could use the moral support.

Herkesin yarattığı, her türlü bilim, edebiyat veya sanat eserlerinden mütevellit manevi ve maddi menfaatlerin korunmasına hakkı vardır. - Everyone has the right to the protection of the moral and material interests resulting from any scientific, literary or artistic production of which he is the author.

moral
{s} ahlâki

O hiçbir ahlaki değere sahip değil. - He has no moral values.

Tom'un ahlaki değerleri yok. - Tom has no moral values.

moral values
ahlâki değerler
moral man
Ahlaklı insan
moral
alınacak ders

Bu hikayeden alınacak dersi anladın mı? - Did you understand the moral of this story?

Hikayeden alınacak ders nedir? - What's the moral of the story?

moral values
ahlâki deşerler
moral
namuslu (cinsel açıdan)
moral
faziletli
moral
aktöreli
moral
değer

Tom'un ahlaki değerleri yok. - Tom has no moral values.

Ahlaki değerler toplumda önemlidir. - Moral values are important in society.

moral
aktöresel
moral development
ahlaki gelişim
moral hazard
ahlaki tehlike
moral laws
töre
moral maturity
(Tıp) ahlaki olgunluk
moral principles
(Felsefe) aktöre
moral rights
alınmış patent hakkı
moral
ahlaklı
moral
törel
moral
tinsel
moral
kıssadan hisse
moral
ahlak dersi
moral
dürüst

O dürüst bir hayat yaşadı. - He lived a moral life.

moral corruption
ahlaki bozukluk
moral defeat
manevi yenilgi
moral excellence
ahlaki mükemmeliyet
moral obligation
manevi yükümlülük
moral philosophy
ahlak bilimi
moral philosophy
ahlak ilmi
moral principle
ahlak kuralı
moral principles
ahlak kuralları
moral support
moral takviyesi
moral agent
Doğru ile yanlış ayrımını yapabilen, ahlâkî açıdan doğruyu düşünüp bulabilen
moral agent
ahlaki ajan
moral compass
ahlaki pusula
moral context
Bir konunun ahlaki yönü
moral damage
(Kanun) Mânevi hasar
moral economy
ahlaki ekonomi
moral economy
(Ekonomi) Ahlâki iktisat
moral high ground
ahlaki yüksek zemin
moral instruction
Ahlâk eğitimi
moral issue
ahlak sorunu
moral judgement
Ahlâkî değer yargısı
moral lapses
ahlaki sapmalar
moral lesson
Ahlâkî ders

A fable always carries a moral lesson which is explicitly stated at the end of the story.

moral majority
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) bir toplumun geleneksel ahlaki değerlerinden yana olanlar; ahlaki çoğunluk
moral play
ahlaki oyun
moral reasoning
ahlaki
moral reasoning
(Psikoloji, Ruhbilim) Ahlâki akıl yürütme, ahlâki muhakeme
moral rights
manevi haklar
moral science
(Bilim, İlim) İnsanla ilgili olarak 'sosyal bilimler ve felsefe'; beşeri bilimler, insanî bilimler
moral sense
ahlaki anlamda
moral standing
ahlak
moral suasion
ahlaki razı etme
moral
{s} ahlâklı
moral
iyilik veya fenalık yapmaya muktedir
moral
{s} ahlak kurallarına uyan
moral
{i} medeni cesaret
moral
ahlak

Et yeme ahlaken yanlış mıdır? - Is eating meat morally wrong?

Merhamet tüm ahlakın temelini oluşturmaktadır. - Compassion is the basis of all morality.

moral
olasılı
moral
doğru

Ahlak anlayışının seni doğru olanı yapmaktan alıkoymasına asla izin verme. - Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right.

Ahlaki evrenin yayı uzun, ancak adalete doğru eğilir. - The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.

moral
düstur
moral
ahlâk dersi
moral
özdeyiş
moral
ahlâkıyat
moral
{s} ahlaksal, ahlaki, törel
moral
ahlaka ait
moral
iyi ahlaklı
moral
doubtful morals ahlâkdışı davranışlar
moral
{s} ahlaklı, prensip sahibi, dürüst
moral
{s} (cinsel açıdan) namuslu
moral action
ahlaki eylem
moral and ethical aspects
ahlaki ve etik yönler
moral certainty
yüksek olasılık
moral code
ahlak kuralı
moral conditions
ahlaki durum
moral conditions
ahlak durumu
moral corruption
ahlak çöküntüsü
moral dimension
ahlaki boyut
moral doctrine
ahlak öğretisi
moral duty
(Kanun) ahlaki vazife
moral duty
(Kanun) ahlaki görev
moral economy
ahlaki iktisat
moral extent
ahlak ölçüsü
moral faculty
iyi ile kötüyü ayırt edebilme
moral fiber
ahlâk yapısı
moral injuction
ahlaki görev
moral justification
(Kanun) ahlaki gerekçe
moral justification
(Kanun) ahlaki karine
moral majority
ahlaki çoğunluk
moral obligation
(Kanun) ahlaki vazife
moral obligation
(Kanun) ahlaki mükellefiyet
moral of a fable
kıssadan hisse
moral police
ahlak zabıtası
moral ripeness
ahlak olgunluğu
moral risk
(Ticaret) moral riziko
moral sociology
ahlak sosyolojisi
moral suasion
(Ticaret) istek veya telkinler
moral support
manevi destek

Ben sana manevi destek vereceğim. - I'll give you moral support.

Tom manevi destek kullanabildi. - Tom could use the moral support.

moral support
manevi yardım
moral turpitude
ahlaksızlık
moral victory
manevi zafer
public moral
(Kanun) ahlaki umumiye
public moral
(Kanun) genel ahlak
point a moral
kıssadan hisse çıkarmak
point a moral
ahlak dersi çıkarmak
basic moral
esas ahlak
public moral
kamu ahlaki
under a moral obligation
başka seçenek
national moral
(Politika, Siyaset) ulusal moral
point a moral
hisse çıkarmak (kıssadan)
English - English
based on strong likelihood or firm conviction rather than actual evidence; "a moral certainty
Moral Majority
A faction of the Republican Party whose policies include conservatism on social and personal matters, marrying religion to the political process. Sometimes pejoratively used to describe the Republican Party since the election of Ronald Reagan to the presidency in 1980
moral
Probable but not proved

a moral certainty.

moral
Of or relating to principles of right and wrong in behaviour, especially for teaching right behaviour

moral judgments, a moral poem.

moral
Moral practices or teachings: modes of conduct
moral
Positively affecting the mind, confidence, or will

a moral victory, moral support.

moral
Capable of right and wrong action

a moral agent.

moral
Conforming to a standard of right behaviour; sanctioned by or operative on one's conscience or ethical judgment

a moral obligation.

moral
The ethical significance or practical lesson
moral Mafia
Any group of religious zealots or fundamentalists intent on enforcing their morality on others
moral arithmetic
Alternative name of felicific calculus
moral authority
The quality or characteristic of being respected for having good character or knowledge, especially as a source of guidance or an exemplar of proper conduct

While the Dalai Lama is lauded in much of the world as a figure of moral authority, Beijing reviles the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

moral code
A written, formal, and consistent set of moral rules, accepted by a person or by a group of people
moral fiber
Alternative spelling of moral fibre
moral fibre
The inner strength to do what one believes to be right; often an ability to make difficult decisions

He lacked the moral fibre to be a leader.

moral fibres
plural form of moral fibre
moral futurism
The moral stance of accepting that moral system that is probably going to be dominant in the future
moral hazard
The prospect that a party insulated from risk may behave differently from the way it would behave if it were fully exposed to the risk
moral hazards
plural form of moral hazard
moral high ground
A position or point of view which is ethically superior or more reputable, in comparison to others which are under consideration

Her legitimacy (as the leader of the party that won the 1990 general election), integrity and stoic acceptance of house arrest enable her to occupy the moral high ground.

moral high grounds
plural form of moral high ground
moral minimum
The specific rule that one should do no intentional harm, often considered the bare minimum required for ethical behavior

First, consider the moral minimum, do no harm.

moral minimum
A standard or principle upheld as indispensable for moral conduct, whether within a particular context or in general

Walzer speculates that a comparison of the moral codes found in various societies might produce a set of standards to which all societies can be held—negative injunctions, most likely, rules against murder, deceit, torture, oppression, and tyranny. These standards would constitute the moral minimum..

moral objectivism
The position that certain acts are objectively right or wrong, independent of human opinion
moral order
A body of unwritten social mores and conventions which serve to maintain societal order

Human culture always implies moral order, and human persons are inescapably moral agents.

moral orders
plural form of moral order
moral panic
A semi-spontaneous or media-generated mass movement based on the perception that an individual, group, community, or culture is dangerously deviant and poses a menace to society. A public outcry
moral philosophy
Ethics

The maxims of common life were arranged in some methodical order, and connected together by a few common principles, in the same manner as they had attempted to arrange and connect the phenomena of nature. The science which pretends to investigate and explain those connecting principles, is what is properly called moral philosophy.

moral suasion
Persuasion brought to bear by appeals to one's moral sense or ethics

The temperance movement also exacerbated ethnic tensions. Before 1850 this movement had been primarily one of self-denial and moral suasion aimed at persuading the Protestant middle and working classes to cast out demon rum and become sober, hard-working, upward-striving citizens.

moral support
Assistance given to a person or cause, usually without getting directly involved

Although I'm not passionate about this issue, I'm willing to attend the rally to give moral support.

moral system
A consistent set of moral axioms or principles
moral turpitude
depravity
moral turpitude
Any base or vile conduct, contrary to accepted morals, that accompanies a crime
moral-panic
Attributive form of moral panic

moral-panic control.

moral suasion
Federal Reserve's influence upon banks to follow a particular course of action
moral
{n} the instruction or meaning of a fable
moral
{a} regarding vice or virtue, upright, good
moral economy
(Ekonomi) Moral economy is a phrase used in a number of contexts to describe the interplay between moral or cultural beliefs and economic activities
moral hazard
A risk to an insurance company resulting from uncertainty about the honesty of the insured
moral obligation
An obligation arising out of considerations of right and wrong. "He did it out of a feeling of moral obligation."
moral reasoning
(Psikoloji, Ruhbilim) Moral reasoning is a study in psychology that overlaps with moral philosophy. It is also called Moral development. Prominent contributors to theory include Lawrence Kohlberg and Elliot Turiel. The term is sometimes used in a different sense: reasoning under conditions of uncertainty, such as obtain in a court of law. It is this sense that gave rise to the phrase, "To a moral certainty;" however, this sense is now little used outside of charges to juries
moral rights
(Kanun) 1. Moral rights (copyright law) are a subset of the rights of creators of copyrighted works, including the right of attribution, the right to have a work published anonymously or pseudonymously, and the right to the integrity of the work.2. Natural rights, also called moral rights or inalienable rights, are rights which are not contingent upon the laws, customs, or beliefs of a particular society or polity
moral science
Human science (also, moral science and human sciences as typical in the UK) is a term applied to the investigation of human life and activities by a rational, systematic and verifiable methodology that acknowledges the validity of both data derived by impartial observation of sensory experience (objective phenomena) and data derived by means of impartial observation of psychological experience (subjective phenomena). It includes but is not necessarily limited to fields of study commonly included within the social sciences and humanities, including history, sociology, anthropology, and economics. Its use of a empirical methodology that encompasses psychological experience contrasts to the purely positivistic approach typical of the natural sciences (which exclude all methods not based solely on external sensory observations). Thus the term is often used to distinguish not only the content of a field of study from those of the natural sciences, but also its methodology
moral science
Moral science (also, human science and human sciences) is a term applied to the investigation of human life and activities by a rational, systematic and verifiable methodology that acknowledges the validity of both data derived by impartial observation of sensory experience (objective phenomena) and data derived by means of impartial observation of psychological experience (subjective phenomena)
moral suasion
During the mid- to late 1960s, the Lyndon B. Johnson Administration tried to deal with the mounting inflationary pressures by direct government influence. Wage-price guideposts were set up, and the power of the presidency was used to coerce big businesses and labor into going along with these guideposts. This general approach came to be known as "jawboning" (sometimes known as "moral suasion") — an unofficial but usually quite effective technique of arm-twisting to prevent labor and businesses from getting big wage or price increases, which works essentially by the implict threat of future Government "regulation" of their industry, such that would impair their profitability
Moral Rearmament
MRA an international movement started in 1938 by the US evangelist Frank Buchman (1878-1961), who wanted to make people behave in a more moral and spiritual way, especially in international relations
moral
the moral significance or practical lesson (the moral of a story)
moral
good according to a standard of right and wrong, as in: The moral thing to do isn't always the popular thing to do
moral
A morality play
moral
the significance of a story or event; "the moral of the story is to love thy neighbor" concerned with principles of right and wrong or conforming to standards of behavior and character based on those principles; "moral sense"; "a moral scrutiny"; "a moral lesson"; "a moral quandary"; "moral convictions"; "a moral life" psychological rather than physical or tangible in effect; "a moral victory"; "moral support" arising from the sense of right and wrong; "a moral obligation" relating to principles of right and wrong; i
moral
Capable of right and wrong action or of being governed by a sense of right; subject to the law of duty
moral
The moral Gower John Gower, the poet, is so called by Chaucer (1320-1402 ) Father of moral philosophy Thomas Aquinas (1227-1274)
moral
Moral courage or duty is based on what you believe is right or acceptable, rather than on what the law says should be done. The Government had a moral, if not a legal duty to pay compensation
moral
{i} ethic; moralistic lesson; lesson; moralistic principle
moral
the practical lesson which anything is designed or fitted to teach; the doctrine meant to be inculcated by a fiction; a maxim
moral
To moralize
moral
relating to principles of right and wrong; i
moral
to morals or ethics; "moral philosophy
moral
The moral of a story or event is what you learn from it about how you should or should not behave. I think the moral of the story is let the buyer beware = message
moral
relating to principles of right and wrong; i e to morals or ethics; "moral philosophy"
moral
moral victory: see victory
moral
Relating to right and wrong as determined by duty
moral
"1 a : of or relating to principles of right and wrong in behavior : ETHICAL"
moral
(adjective) virtuous, doing the right thing
moral
positively affecting the mind, confidence or will
moral
See Morality, 5
moral
Morals are principles and beliefs concerning right and wrong behaviour. Western ideas and morals They have no morals
moral
adhering to ethical and moral principles; "it seems ethical and right"; "followed the only honorable course of action"; "had the moral courage to stand alone"
moral
conforming to a standard of right behaviour; sanctioned by or operative on ones conscience or ethical judgment
moral
{s} ethical; virtuous; righteous; principled; conforming to accepted standards; having integrity
moral
psychological rather than physical or tangible in effect; "a moral victory"; "moral support"
moral
based on strong likelihood or firm conviction rather than actual evidence; "a moral certainty"
moral
of or relating to principles of right and wrong in behaviour, especially for teaching right behavior
moral
Acting upon or through one's moral nature or sense of right, or suited to act in such a manner; as, a moral arguments; moral considerations
moral
Moral means relating to beliefs about what is right or wrong. She describes her own moral dilemma in making the film. matters of church doctrine and moral teaching. = ethical + morally mor·al·ly When, if ever, is it morally justifiable to allow a patient to die?
moral
Serving to teach or convey a moral; as, a moral lesson; moral tales
moral
Relating to duty or obligation; pertaining to those intentions and actions of which right and wrong, virtue and vice, are predicated, or to the rules by which such intentions and actions ought to be directed; relating to the practice, manners, or conduct of men as social beings in relation to each other, as respects right and wrong, so far as they are properly subject to rules
moral
knowing right from wrong behavior
moral
The inner meaning or significance of a fable, a narrative, an occurrence, an experience, etc
moral
concerned with principles of right and wrong or conforming to standards of behavior and character based on those principles; "moral sense"; "a moral scrutiny"; "a moral lesson"; "a moral quandary"; "moral convictions"; "a moral life"
moral
relating to, dealing with, or capable of making the distinction between right and wrong in conduct
moral
The doctrine or practice of the duties of life; manner of living as regards right and wrong; conduct; behavior; usually in the plural
moral
Synonym for "ethical " See ethics
moral
relating to, dealing with, or capable of making the distinction between, right and wrong in conduct; relating to, serving to teach, or in accordance with, the principles of right and wrong; good or right in conduct or character
moral
Supported by reason or probability; practically sufficient; opposed to legal or demonstrable; as, a moral evidence; a moral certainty
moral
arising from the sense of right and wrong; "a moral obligation"
moral
The moral perspective in which one knows the good, proper, and right The moral perspective is played out through one's motives, intentions, and actions as they impinge on or affect other human beings
moral
referring to what is right and wrong, good and bad, with emphasis on overt behavior-acts, habits, and customs Levels of moral reasoning include preconventional morality, based on avoiding punishment and striving for pleasure; conventional morality, based on pleasing others and doing one's duty as prescribed by authorities; and postconventional morality, based on mutual consent and personal conviction See ethics
moral
If you give someone moral support, you encourage them in what they are doing by expressing approval. Moral as well as financial support was what the West should provide
moral
able to know right from wrong in conduct; deciding and acting from that understanding
moral
Sometimes opposed to material and physical; as, moral pressure or support
moral
Used sometimes in distinction from religious; as, a moral rather than a religious life
moral
A moral person behaves in a way that is believed by most people to be good and right. The people who will be on the committee are moral, cultured, competent people. = ethical + morally mor·al·ly Art is not there to improve you morally
moral
Conformed to accepted rules of right; acting in conformity with such rules; virtuous; just; as, a moral man
moral
A lesson learned from a mediation
moral
the significance of a story or event; "the moral of the story is to love thy neighbor"
moral agent
A being whose actions are capable of moral evaluation We may say that an avalanche killed three people, but the avalanche is not open to moral evaluation The avalanche is an amoral force A competent and reasonably mature human being is the most familiar example of a moral agent In contrast, most so-called "lower" (that is, non-human) animals are generally understood to be amoral (although this is open to debate regarding species that have complex and flexible social relations, like primates and dolphins )
moral agent
"A creature capable of right and wrong action; a being endowed with the ability to perceive what is right and proper conduct in his various relations with the power of free choice and thus able to be governed by truth addressed to his intelligence " (Gordon C Olson, The Moral Government of God) Charles Finney wrote that "man is a FREE AGENT because he possesses intelligence with the power and liberty of choice " Finney also writes, "moral agency implies the possession of intellect, reason, will, [and] conscience "
moral agent
* A being whose actions are capable of moral evaluation We may say that an avalanche killed three people, but the avalanche is not open to moral evaluation The avalanche is an amoral force A competent and reasonably mature human being is the most familiar example of a moral agent In contrast, most so-called "lower" (that is, non-human) animals are generally understood to be amoral (although this is open to debate regarding species that have complex and flexible social relations, like primates and dolphins )
moral asset
characteristic that is morally beneficial, positive moral quality (such as the knowledge of right and wrong)
moral bearings
moral behavior, ethical manner of acting
moral code
moral outlook, moral viewpoint, ethics, morals
moral consideration
consideration which is related to ethical or moral laws
moral crisis
period characterized by immorality, period in which people reject previously accepted values
moral decay
spiritual decline, cultural decline, spiritual degeneration
moral fault
ethical fault, behavior that is undesirable by its nature
moral fiber
ethical basis, moral foundation
moral fibre
mor·al fi·bre in AM, use moral fiber Moral fibre is the quality of being determined to do what you think is right. a man of stern moral fibre
moral force
an efficient incentive; "they hoped it would act as a spiritual dynamic on all churches
moral hazard
Dishonesty or character defects in an individual that increase the chance of loss
moral hazard
a tendency for losses to be greater or more frequent when covered by insurance (Evans, 1984)
moral hazard
*: A risk to an insurance company resulting from uncertainty about the honesty of the insured
moral hazard
As "physical hazard" relates to susceptibility to fire or wind, the term "moral hazard" relates to susceptibility to loss through moral lapse of the owner (e g ,"Burn the house down and collect from the insurance company before losing it in a foreclosure to the finance company ")
moral hazard
Danger of loss arising from the nature of the insured rather than from the physical nature of the risk This would encompass those instances where the chance of loss is increased by an insured's carelessness, incompetence, recklessness, indifference to loss or an insured's fraudulent nature
moral hazard
A hazard resulting from the indifferent or dishonest attitude of an individual in relation to insured property
moral hazard
a term based on the principle that if actors are allowed to escape the consequences of their risky actions, they are more likely to engage in reckless behavior in future The moral hazard argument is often used to argue against the forgiveness of legally contracted debt; it has also been used to criticize IMF rescue packages, which bail out reckless bankers and private investors
moral hazard
A moral characteristic of an insured that may increase the likelihood of a loss, e g integrity, honesty, experience
moral hazard
Evidence of information market failure within the health insurance market The more complete an insurance coverage package the less individuals must bear the financial consequences of their consumption decisions thereby reducing the incentive to economize in consumption of health services
moral hazard
- A condition of morals or habits that increase the probability of a loss from a peril
moral hazard
The possibility that the signal or expectation of possible future government support may induce an undesirable change in behavior by management of an enterprise or bank, for example by engaging in more risky activities because some of the potential losses are seen as being effectively underwritten by the government
moral hazard
The risk that the existence of a contract will change the behavior of one or both parties to the contract, e g an insured firm will take fewer fire precautions
moral hazard
The possibility that a person may act dishonestly in an insurance transaction
moral hazard
The effect of personal reputation, character, associates, personal living habits, financial responsibility, and environment upon an individual's general insurability
moral hazard
The danger that a proposed insured might deliberately attempt to conceal or misrepresent information Moral hazard is a risk factor that affects the underwriting decision
moral hazard
the temptation facing managers to engage in risky activities when they are protected from the consequences of failure, e g by guaranteed severance payments
moral hazard
The risk that a party to a transaction has not entered into a contract in good faith, has provided misleading information about its assets, liabilities, or credit capacity, or has an incentive to take unusual risks in a desperate attempt to earn a profit before the contract settles
moral hazard
the principle that says that those who purchase insurance have a reduced incentive to avoid what they are insured against
moral hazard
moral hazard refers to the tendency of insurance to discourage policyholders from protecting themselves from risk
moral hazard
Characteristics of the insured or applicant that increase the probability or severity of loss
moral hazard
A situation in which the presence of insurance or some government policy weakens incentives for individuals, households or firms to behave prudently
moral hazard
Describes behavior when agents do not bear the full cost of their actions and are thus more likely to take such actions
moral hazard
A condition of morals or habits that increases the probability of loss from a peril An extreme example would be an individual who previously burned his own property to collect the insurance (G)
moral hazard
the loss to an insurance company resulting from possible lack of prudence or honesty on the part of policyholders
moral hazard
A concept referring to the notion that some countries may keep in place inefficient and carbon-intensive regulatory energy policies in order to increase opportunities for clean Development Mechanism investment
moral majority
If there is a large group in society that holds strong, conservative opinions on matters of morality and religion, you can refer to these people as the moral majority. In the United States, there is an organized group called the Moral Majority. unless the writers begin to write decent comedy and stop pandering to the moral majority. the group of people in a society who have strong moral beliefs and think they are always right. In the US there is an organized group called the Moral Majority, who have strong Christian principles
moral obligation
commitment to follow one's conscience
moral obligation
an obligation arising out of considerations of right and wrong; "he did it out of a feeling of moral obligation
moral philosophy
ethics: the philosophical study of moral values and rules
moral play
religious drama performed in Europe during the Middle Ages
moral principle
the principle that conduct should be moral
moral principle
the principles of right and wrong that are accepted by an individual or a social group; "the Puritan ethic"; "a person with old-fashioned values"
moral principles
ethics, beliefs on moral issues
moral psychology
In psychology, study of the development of the moral sense i. e., of the capacity for forming judgments about what is morally right or wrong, good or bad. The U.S. psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg hypothesized that people's development of moral standards passes through several levels. At the early level, that of preconventional moral reasoning, the child uses external and physical events (such as pleasure or pain) as the source for moral decisions; his standards are based strictly on what will avoid punishment or bring pleasure. At the intermediate level, that of conventional moral reasoning, the child or adolescent views moral standards as a way of maintaining the approval of authority figures, chiefly his parents, and acts in accordance with their precepts. At the third level, that of postconventional moral reasoning, the adult bases his moral standards on principles that he himself has evaluated and accepts as inherently valid, regardless of society's opinion. Beginning in the 1970s Kohlberg's work was criticized by psychologists and philosophers influenced by feminism. According to Carol Gilligan, Kohlberg's stages are inherently sexist, because they equate moral maturity with an orientation toward moral problems that is socially instilled in males but not in females. Whereas the male "ethic of rights and justice" treats morality in terms of abstract principles and conceives of moral agents as essentially autonomous, acting independently of their social situations according to general rules, the female "ethic of care" treats morality in terms of concrete bonds to particular individuals based on feelings of care and responsibility and conceives of moral agents as connected and interdependent through their feelings of care and responsibility for each other
moral sense
comprehension of what is and is not ethical
moral sense
motivation deriving logically from ethical or moral principles that govern a person's thoughts and actions
moral standing
* A being's moral standing determines the extent to which its well-being must be ethically considered for its own sake To say that some group of beings have moral standing is to say that, as a moral matter, their well-being must be given some consideration It does not decide the question of whether they have the same moral standing as people (and thus have "human" rights) The welfare of such beings, for example cattle, might be considered for prudential reasons, too, but that would not require that they have moral standing For example one might judge that it would be important to feed one's cattle, just as one might decide it was stupid to throw one's stamp collection into the river, thinking of the stamps or cattle as an investment without believing that either the cattle or the stamps deserve better treatment In that case one would not be considering the moral standing of the cattle
moral standing
A being's moral standing determines the extent to which its well-being must be ethically considered for its own sake To say that some group of beings have moral standing is to say that, as a moral matter, their well-being must be given some consideration It does not decide the question of whether they have the same moral standing as people (and thus have "human" rights) The welfare of such beings, for example cattle, might be considered for prudential reasons, too, but that would not require that they have moral standing For example one might judge that it would be important to feed one's cattle, just as one might decide it was stupid to throw one's stamp collection into the river, thinking of the stamps or cattle as an investment without believing that either the cattle or the stamps deserve better treatment In that case one would not be considering the moral standing of the cattle
moral strength
strength to uphold one's principles
moral suasion
A technique by which the Fed indicates its wishes to its membe banks, precluding more drastic actions to achieve desired goals
moral suasion
A type of approach used by an authority to get members to adhere to a policy, goal or initiative It involves applying pressure on members, rather than using legislation or force, to achieve a desired result
moral superiority
more highly-developed conscience, greater understanding of ethical issues
moral support
encouragement
moral turpitude
moral baseness, ethical ignobility
moral victory
victory of ethics, win caused by ethics
non-moral
Not moral; unconnected with morals; having no relation to ethics or morals; not involving ethical or moral considerations
draw the moral
find the moral of a story
Turkish - English

Definition of moral(a) in Turkish English dictionary

moral bozucu
frustrating
moral bozmak
get somebody down
moral bozucu
disappointing
moral yıkıntısı
(Ticaret) burnout
moral bozmak
demoralize
moral bozucu
dispiriting
moral bozukluğu
despondancy
moral bozukluğu
dejection
moral hizmetler
(Askeri) special services
moral konuşması
(Askeri) pep talk
moral sıfır
(Argo) blue funk
moral vermek
rally
moral vermek
reassure
moral vermek
cheer somebody up
moral vermek
buoy up
moral vermek
fortify
moral
spirits

He was in low spirits for months after his girlfriend left him. - Kız arkadaşı terk ettikten sonra aylarca morali bozuk gezdi.

He is in high spirits today. - Bugün onun morali yüksek.

moral
moral, ethical
moral
morale

The Morales are in the living room. - Morales oturma odasında.

Their morale is high. - Onların morali yüksek.

moral
morals, ethics
moral alkışı
cheering applause
moral alkışı
encouraging applause
moral bozan
enervator
moral bozan şey ya da kişi
demoralizer
moral bozan şey ya da kişi
demoraliser
moral bozucu
depressing

I think he's a bit depressing. - Sanırım o biraz moral bozucu.

moral bozucu bir şekilde
demoralizingly
moral bozukluğu
deformity
moral bozukluğu
low ego
moral bozukluğu
despondency
moral bozukluğu
despond
moral bozukluğu
enervation
moral bozukluğu
dispiritedness
moral bozulma noktası
(Havacılık) frustration threshold
moral bozulması
demoralization
moral güç
(Hukuk) shot in the arm
moral hizmet bölüğü
(Askeri) special service company
moral hizmet okulu
(Askeri) school for special service
moral hizmet subayı
(Askeri) special services officer
moral hizmet subayı
(Askeri) morale officer
moral hizmetler şubesi
(Askeri) special services division
moral riziko
(Ticaret) moral risk
moral takviyesi
moral support
moral vererek
reassuredly
moral verici konuşma
pep talk
moral verme
elevation
moral vermek
to give sb moral support, to bolster sb's morale, to cheer sb up, to buoy sb up, to reassure
moral vermek
hearten
moral vermek
relieve one's mind
moral vermek
cheer up!
moral vermek
edify
moral çöküntüsü
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) demoralization
disiplin-moral
(Askeri) discipline morale
füze uyarı almacı; moral, sağlık ve eğlence
(Askeri) missile warning receiver; morale, welfare, and recreation
sağlık, moral ve refah
(Askeri) health, morale, and welfare
ulusal moral
(Hukuk) national moral
yüksek moral
high spirits
moral(a)
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