moral: [14] Latin mōs ‘custom’ is the starting point of the English family of ‘morality’-words (and its plural mōres was acquired by English as mores in the 20th century). Its derived adjective mōrālis was coined, according to some by Cicero, as a direct translation of Greek ēthikós ‘ethical’, to denote the ‘typical or proper behaviour of human beings in society’, and was borrowed directly into English in the 14th century. Morale [18] was borrowed from French, where it is the feminine form of the adjective moral.
At first it was used in English for ‘morality, moral principles’; its modern sense ‘condition with regard to optimism, cheerfulness, etc’ is not recorded until the early 19th century. => morale, mores
moral (adj.)
mid-14c., "pertaining to character or temperament" (good or bad), from Old French moral (14c.) and directly from Latin moralis "proper behavior of a person in society," literally "pertaining to manners," coined by Cicero ("De Fato," II.i) to translate Greek ethikos (see ethics) from Latin mos (genitive moris) "one's disposition," in plural, "mores, customs, manners, morals," of uncertain origin. Perhaps sharing a PIE root with English mood (n.1).
Meaning "morally good, conforming to moral rules," is first recorded late 14c. of stories, 1630s of persons. Original value-neutral sense preserved in moral support, moral victory (with sense of "pertaining to character as opposed to physical action"). Related: Morally.
moral (n.)
"moral exposition of a story," c. 1500, from moral (adj.) and from French moral and Late Latin morale.
雙語(yǔ)例句
1. Malvolio becomes, in default of competition, the play's moral centre.
因?yàn)闆](méi)有與其競(jìng)爭(zhēng)者,馬伏里奧自然成了該劇的道德核心。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
2. Her case falls within the ambit of moral law.
她的案例屬于道德法律的范疇。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
3. Bennett launched a crusade for "moral values" against decadent "liberal relativism."