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1 dobbeltmoral
subst. double set of morals subst. double standard, double standard of morality -
2 forbindelse
communication, connection, connection, contact, link* * *subst. [ det å forbinde noe] connection, connecting, joining (f.eks.the joining of two towns by a railway
) subst. [ sammenheng] tie-in, connection (f.eks. there is no connection between the two events, the connection between religion and morality) subst. [ bindeledd] link (f.eks.the Crown is a link between the Commonwealth and the Mother Country
) subst. [ samferdsel] communication(s) (f.eks.communications between mainland and the island were rendered difficult by ice
) subst. [ fast rute] service (f.eks.the service between Oslo and Copenhagen, the air service to Iraq is temporarily suspended
) subst. (telefoni) connection, line (f.eks.a bad line, have a line to USA
) subst. [ i personlige forhold] connection, relations (f.eks.the relations between the party leaders are very intimate
) subst. [ person man står i forbindelse med] connection, contact (f.eks.all our English contacts, I have connections in Spain, he has connections in the ??
) subst. (kjemi) [ resultatet] compound, (det å) combination (f.eks.the laws of chemical combination
) subst. (militær) communication(s) (f.eks. ) (kjemisk forbindelse) compound, chemical combination -
3 moral
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4 moralitet
subst. morality -
5 sedelighet
subst. morality, moral conduct -
6 seksualmoral
subst. sexual morals, sexual morality -
7 etikk
ethics, morality -
8 moral
morale, moral, morality, morals
См. также в других словарях:
Morality — • Morality is antecedent to ethics: it denotes those concrete activities of which ethics is the science. It may be defined as human conduct in so far as it is freely subordinated to the ideal of what is right and fitting Catholic Encyclopedia.… … Catholic encyclopedia
Morality — Mo*ral i*ty, n.; pl. {Moralities}. [L. moralitas: cf. F. moralit[ e].] 1. The relation of conformity or nonconformity to the moral standard or rule; quality of an intention, a character, an action, a principle, or a sentiment, when tried by the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
morality — (n.) late 14c., moral qualities, from O.Fr. moralité moral (of a story); moral instruction; morals, moral character (13c.) and directly from L.L. moralitatem (nom. moralitas) manner, character, from L. moralis (see MORAL (Cf. moral) (adj.)).… … Etymology dictionary
morality — [mō ral′i tē, môral′i tē, məral′i tē] n. pl. moralities [ME moralite < OFr < LL moralitas < L moralis] 1. moral quality or character; rightness or wrongness, as of an action 2. the character of being in accord with the principles or… … English World dictionary
morality — index ethics, integrity, principle (virtue), probity, propriety (correctness), rectitude, resp … Law dictionary
morality — *goodness, virtue, rectitude Analogous words: integrity, probity, honor, *honesty: *excellence, perfection, virtue, merit … New Dictionary of Synonyms
morality — [n] ethics, honesty chastity, conduct, decency, ethicality, ethicalness, gentleness, godliness, good habits, goodness, honor, ideals, incorruptibility, incorruption, integrity, justice, manners, moral code, morals, mores, philosophy, principle,… … New thesaurus
morality — ► NOUN (pl. moralities) 1) principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong or good and bad behaviour. 2) moral behaviour. 3) the extent to which an action is right or wrong. 4) a system of values and moral principles … English terms dictionary
Morality — Appropriate redirects here. For other uses, see Appropriation (disambiguation). Morality (from the Latin moralitas manner, character, proper behavior ) is the differentiation among intentions, decisions, and actions between those that are good… … Wikipedia
morality — mo|ral|i|ty [məˈrælıti] n [U] 1.) beliefs or ideas about what is right and wrong and about how people should behave ▪ sexual morality public/private/personal morality ▪ the decline in standards of personal morality ▪ The authorities are… … Dictionary of contemporary English
morality — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ conventional, traditional ▪ strict ▪ personal, private ▪ common, public, social … Collocations dictionary