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"moralize" Definitions
  1. to tell other people what is right and wrong especially in order to emphasize that your opinions are correct
"moralize" Antonyms

80 Sentences With "moralize"

How to use moralize in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "moralize" and check conjugation/comparative form for "moralize". Mastering all the usages of "moralize" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Better not to generalize, and better still not to moralize.
Instead of trying my food—participating—you want to stand outside and moralize.
Your job is not to send messages or moralize; it's to entertain people.
Not to moralize, but rather to show that love will always triumph over hate.
Most disturbing of all, perhaps, Ms. Du and her brilliant librettist, Royce Vavrek, refuse to moralize.
Jo's (heavy-handed) attempts to use her art to moralize and explain evil can't excuse that.
Douthat does not moralize about this situation or place the blame solely on the sexual revolution.
In saying this I don't mean to moralize about her writing, which I find deeply engaging.
Where some shows would try to moralize paying for sex, Special swerves away from that puritanical impulse.
The left, by comparison, tended to moralize, and spoke in the language of justice instead of growth.
People thought it was wrong for someone who has money to moralize on behalf of everyone else.
Bonello refuses to moralize his story or assign any kind of blame to any of his characters.
Like many who moralize against the rich, Rousseau was not much interested in the conditions of the poor.
The New Health Care When we moralize about food, we remove joy from eating and forget the benefits of moderation.
The religious right, of course, hates the new cultural mores because it wanted to re-moralize America on its terms.
One of the things that I think is important is that we shouldn't moralize makeup... There are different forms of resistance.
"Not to moralize, but rather to show that love will always triumph over hate," explains William Löthman to The Creators Project.
We never see them; most likely, we are them, though it's to Guirgis's credit that he doesn't over-moralize that point.
While the new French biopic doesn't have to moralize on the issue, it instead alters the facts to avoid making contemporary audiences uncomfortable.
"In modern parenting culture, it is hard to resist the temptation to moralize everything and have everything fit to brain enhancement," Kamenetz said.
When the new year begins, diet culture hits a spike, as people moralize eating and try to rectify the "wrong" they believe they've done.
My intention was to keep the conversation personal—not to moralize—and to thereby create more understanding and empathy because that's where change happens.
He does not judge, scold or moralize, but follows the misfit children of his imagination as far beyond respectability as they will take him.
"This isn't some policy that the Trump administration dreamed up because they wanted to moralize about children," said Katy French Talento, Trump's former public health advisor.
But he would have been better off resisting the Beale-like impulse to moralize about what we've just seen and trusting us to think for ourselves. ♦
Ms. Heller and the screenwriters, Jeff Whitty and the great Nicole Holofcener, resist the impulse to moralize about Lee's misdeeds or to sand down her rough edges.
But the left has far more cultural power than in the past, and some on the left have used that power to re-moralize the public square.
Not to moralize or anything but Anthony Davis is a very bad example for tall, thin children and should be kicked out of basketball and polite society forever.
In an interview with Le Parisien newspaper published on Thursday, Macron said if elected, he would pass a law to "moralize" French politics and fight conflicts of interest.
Mr. Linklater has never been inclined to moralize, and he has banished all piety from this movie, along with any conflict larger than the occasional collision of male egos.
Duras's "refusal to moralize sexuality," as Mr. Hill put it, means her work often resists black-and-white feminist interpretations, but she was a fierce advocate of women's rights.
Lepore begins her book by rejecting the urge to moralize, but she cannot resist making stern judgments near the end of it about the troubling, crude politics of the present.
As societies cohere, they have to ask these fundamental questions, and Horizon "gets that"—and better, it's almost anthropological in its decision not to moralize or judge based on cultural difference.
But human curiosity and travel aren't going away, and the intention here is not to reprove or moralize about travel, which is just one important component of Earth's skyrocketing carbon problem.
And if they suffer from contradiction—which isn't the same as ambiguity—it's because they moralize about their less-savory characters, while encouraging and permitting players to do as they do.
But the system of dependence does sometimes make America's allies behave like adolescents: quick to criticize and moralize about America's policies, and equally quick to seek its protection in a crisis.
International conservation and animal welfare organizations are using the outbreak to moralize about the traditional Chinese practice of eating a wider range of animal species than people of European heritage consider acceptable.
Macron says he wants to "moralize" French politics in the wake of erstwhile conservative frontrunner Francois Fillon coming under investigation over allegations he paid his wife for work she did not actually do.
" Comedian Ricky Gervais recently made headlines at the Golden Globes for criticizing this tendency to moralize at awards shows, telling his fellow celebrities, "You're in no position to lecture the public about anything.
The resulting squabble — and eventual battle — over that treasure coats few of the characters in valor and results in Tolkien using the opportunity to moralize not too subtly over the corrosive nature of greed.
As soon as we start to moralize an issue, we stop thinking about it in terms of costs and benefits, dismiss anyone that disagrees as immoral, and harshly punish those we see as villains to protect the 'victims.
It might make you feel righteous to defend only the speech you like, but you'll sound no better than the president's evangelical Christian supporters, who moralize about family values while defending the rectitude of a self-described pussy-grabber.
Most of the cast, though — including Christopher Abbott as Yossarian and top-notch actors like Kyle Chandler (Colonel Cathcart) and Hugh Laurie (Major de Coverley) — can't overcome the dullness of the screenplay, with its very un-Hellerian tendency to moralize.
One of many recent works to study post-traumatic stress (including the documentary "Thank You for Your Service" and the novel "Preparation for the Next Life," which both focused almost exclusively on men), "Blood Stripe" refuses to moralize or explain itself.
I'm not here to moralize—I like a bet as much as the next guy—but the link between soccer and gambling is already so inexorable that it's impossible to watch a game without Ray Winstone trying to force a tasty little 4/1 shot down your throat.
I am not here to moralize on things like birthday cake-flavored liquor or pineapple Juuls as they relate to potentially corrupting the underage; all I can tell you is that if you drink rosé vodka as though it is regular rosé, you will probably end up not remembering it.
Well certainly, I believe the United States should be able to advocate for human rights in any part of the world, but right now that's a much less compelling case because people are looking at us and saying, are you really in position to moralize to us about the way we're treating this particular subgroup of people.
McCabe's fellow traveler in the empty collusion investigation they cooked up and ran — fired former FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien Comey3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 Barr predicts progressive prosecutors will lead to 'more crime, more victims' James Comey shows our criminal justice system works as intended MORE — was quick to seize another opportunity to moralize to a camera the day after AG Barr used the "S" word.
So even though I'd really rather Ralph Drollinger, co-founder of Capitol Ministries devoted to evangelizing government officials, not lead a Bible study group with US Cabinet members -- since he claims that America is required by God to "moralize a fallen world through the use of force," that women cannot lead in marriage or the church and that homosexuality is illegitimate in God's eyes -- instead of simply opposing this, let's fight instead for equal time. Rev.
I'm sure this is a matter of provincial New Yorkism, but it's hard to think of a place on the planet that has evolved into such a complex social organism, with the constellation of cultures, the tremendous disparity of wealth, Wall Street's efforts to finance what it can't officially control, and — this is an issue not to moralize but to understand — well, it seemed like New York deserved to have its story told in a way that honored its complexity.
The Marian music in the baroque period is strongly influenced by the Latin tradition, but develops its own characteristics. Marian songs venerate her exceptional sanctity. Many Marian songs have the form of litanies, expressing veneration of Mary. Others moralize the faithful in light of her virtuous life.
"Ethicist" may also mean a person who subscribes to ethicism, which can be defined either as a philosophy based on ethics or "the view that a work of art's moral point of view affects the work's overall aesthetic evaluation". "Ethicist" may also mean a person with a tendency to moralize.
It was screened at BFI Flare in 2016 as part of a program of films about chemsex, with the website The Conversation praising it as one of the only films in the program that did not moralize about the practice."Chemsex: why is gay sex causing straight panic?". The Conversation, April 12, 2016.
The Electoral court system of Brazil was created in 1932, with the intention to moralize the Brazilian electoral system. It was dissolved in 1937 then reinstated in 1945, and has been in continuous operation since. The Constitution provides for the existence of the court system. However, its structure and roles are defined in the Brazilian Electoral Code of 1964.
The Democratic Renewal Party (, , PRD; also Democratic Renovator Party) was a political party in Portugal, founded in 1985 with the political support of the then independent President of the Republic, Ramalho Eanes, and lasting until 2000. At the time of its foundation, it was meant to "moralize Portuguese political life" and the party positioned itself in the political centre. Its first leader was Hermínio Martinho.
This essay signaled the public opposition to the supposed improprieties of plays staged during the previous three decades. Collier convincingly argued that the, "business of plays is to recommend Vertue, and discountenance Vice". Other sentimentalists took on the responsibility to moralize the stage in hopes of repairing the perceived damage of restoration comedies. These playwrights and theoreticians used the theater to instruct rather than delight after puritan opposition to theater grew from 1660 to 1698.
In this example, Nietzsche tells a fictional story of a priest who converts a man to Christianity, in order to keep him moral. However, his man eventually falls into basic human instinct such as lust, and is thus labeled as a sinner. Afterwards, the man is full of hatred, and is ostracized by others. The priest in this story represents the 'improver,' as he attempts to moralize someone, but only makes the man's life miserable.
As the men sit up with the body, they moralize and criticize the deceased. This angers Laird, who comes into the room and points out how each of them are guilty, then exposing the corruption of their towns' leaders and how much they had hated Harvey. The next day, Laird, who is disgusted with himself for never having found a life elsewhere as Harvey had done, is too drunk to attend the funeral. The story ends with the notation that Laird dies of a cold shortly thereafter.
He is best known for his Annals (), a seven book annalistic history of Rome that spanned from the mythical founding of Rome until 146 BC. His historical account, now lost and known to us from only forty-nine short quotations or paraphrases, was written in a simple style of Latin. Later historians relied upon his work, though many did not find it satisfactory. Cicero considered his work jejune, and Livy did not consider him fully reliable, due to his tendency to moralize and politicize the histories that he recounted.Badian, Ernst.
In political discussions the usage of the term Gutmensch gains a moral polarized shape, which is convenient to decrease the respect of the political opponent and to discredit them. There are strategies in political rhetoric to discuss political topics either on a factual level or on a moral level. Stigmatizations of political opponents by using terms like "pc" (political correctness) or Gutmensch moralize communications. Therefore, the position of the political opponent is discredited and he is forced to change position, if he doesn`t want to lose reputation.
Heian literature focuses on the capital's view of provincial disturbances, but medieval war tales shift their perspective to focus on those actually involved with the war, often sympathizing with the defeated warriors. The authors of gunki monogatari do not hesitate to sympathize with the warriors or moralize about their actions. The general form of the warrior narrative usually consists of three parts, describing respectively the causes of the war, the battles themselves, and the war's aftermath. The texts are generally episodic, broken up into numerous small tales often focusing on select incidents or warriors.
The Vice character developed into the villain in Renaissance theatre. Richard III in Shakespeare's drama of the same name links himself with the Vice when he declares: :"Thus like the formal Vice, Iniquity, / I moralize two meanings in one word" (III.i.82–83) Other examples of the Vice in Renaissance theatre include Iago (who plays up the more villainous aspects of the Vice) from Othello and Sir John Falstaff (who plays up the more comic aspects of the vice) from Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2 and The Merry Wives of Windsor.
He had already founded two publications, Acción and El Agrarista, as well as publishing a tract entitled El Gato in the early 1920s. However, 1925 saw a large increase in the number of military journals published in Mexico. Those already in existence, such as the Revista del Ejército y de la Marina (Magazine of the Army and the Navy), took a new editorial stance under the direction of Professor Ignacio Richkarday, who Amaro had appointed editor, to moralize the army. While Revista was aimed at the officer corps, Amaro founded El Soldado, which emphasized the same themes, as a supplement for enlisted men.
This example is the first stanza from Spenser's Faerie Queene. The formatting, wherein all lines but the first and last are indented, is the same as in contemporary printed editions. > Lo I the man, whose Muse whilome did maske, As time her taught, in lowly > Shepheards weeds, Am now enforst a far unfitter taske, For trumpets sterne > to chaunge mine Oaten reeds, And sing of Knights and Ladies gentle deeds; > Whose prayses having slept in silence long, Me, all too meane, the sacred > Muse areeds To blazon broad emongst her learned throng: Fierce warres and > faithfull loues shall moralize my song.
An induction in a play is an explanatory scene, summary or other text that stands outside or apart from the main play with the intent to comment on it, moralize about it or in the case of dumb show—to summarize the plot or underscore what is afoot. Typically, an induction precedes the main text of a play. Inductions are a common feature of plays written and performed in the Renaissance period, including those of Shakespeare. While Shakespeare plays do not typically have inductions, they are sometimes depicted as part of the device of the play within the play.
Luciana Oliveira, Fighting for a Voice: Support for Land Reform Versus the Landless Workers Movement: A Framing Analysis of the Brazilian Press. VDM Verlag, 2009, It does not outright disavow the movement's struggle for land reform, but Brazilian media moralize: "to deplore the invasion of productive land, the MST's irrationality and lack of responsibility, the ill-using of distributed land parcels and to argue for the existence of alternate peaceful solutions".Alessandra Aldé & Fernando Lattman- Weltman: "O Mst na TV: Sublimação do Político, Moralismo e Crônica Cotidiana do Nosso 'Estado de Natureza'". LPCPOP-Iuperj paper, available at .
Generally broadside ballads included only the lyrics, often with the name of a known tune that would fit suggested below the title. Music critic Peter Gammond has written: > Although the broadsides occasionally printed traditional 'rural' ballads, > the bulk of them were of urban origin, written by the journalistic hacks of > the day to cover such news as a robbery or a hanging, to moralize, or simply > to offer entertainment. In their diversity they covered all the duties of > the modern newspaper. The use of crude verse or doggerel was common, as this > was thought to heighten the dramatic impact.
Michael Moriarty plays an amoral anthropologist who has been lumbered with his dysfunctional adolescent son (Ricky Addison Reed). He returns to Salem's Lot, the town of his birth, to find that it has been taken over by the undead. A few living people are kept around to provide blood for the vampires and to operate the gas station and shops in the daytime. Knowing of the anthropologist's refusal to moralize about other people's lifestyles (in the opening scene he is seen refusing to interfere in a human sacrifice and concerned only for the quality of the film he is shooting), the vampires employ him to write their story.
Drummond "is a skillful writer who handles prose well", says Carol Simpson Stern in St. James Guide to Crime and Mystery. Her novels, set in London, Durban, or imaginary places, range from Junta, a political novel about apartheid, to a series of novels such as The People in Glass House that seem descended from Gothic horror stories. They may involve "...half-mad women, mistaken identities, bitter rivalries among kin, men of raffish ways, and women moon-goddesses who destroy those near them...". Less pleasing to Stern in some of Drummond's work are what she regards as thinly developed characters, stock situations, and a tendency to moralize.
Published exclusively in French, Les habits neufs de la politique mondiale (The New Clothes of World Politics) argues that the following political fact is irreversible: liberal democracy, as a global social and historical modality of statecraft, is dying. The two movements delivering such blows, neoliberalism and neoconservatism, feature both resonances and dissonances. Brown argues that whilst the former acts as a political rationality, a mode of general regulation of behavior, the latter is both necessary to its survival, and parasitic of its survival. As a form of governmentality that redefines freedom, neoliberalism will moralize politics, limiting its scope; this is the function of neo-conservatism.
Notes on Suicide (Fitzcarraldo, 2015) Against the prevailing tendency to either moralize against suicide or glorified self-murder, Critchley defends suicide as a phenomenon that should be thought about seriously and soberly. To that end, Critchley examines numerous suicides and reflects on the increase of suicide in our society. What We Think When We Think About Football (Profile Books/Penguin, 2017) Critchley argues that football occupies a particular place in society in that it at once originates from sociality and solidarity (e.g., that many teams formed from local churches or various community groups; the relation between a team and fans), while also being completely consumed by money, capital, and the dissolution and alienation of social life.
Little Red Riding Hood (1883), Gustave Doré Aesop featured wolves in several of his fables, playing on the concerns of Ancient Greece's settled, sheep-herding world. His most famous is the fable of "The Boy Who Cried Wolf", which is directed at those who knowingly raise false alarms, and from which the idiomatic phrase "to cry wolf" is derived. Some of his other fables concentrate on maintaining the trust between shepherds and guard dogs in their vigilance against wolves, as well as anxieties over the close relationship between wolves and dogs. Although Aesop used wolves to warn, criticize and moralize about human behaviour, his portrayals added to the wolf's image as a deceitful and dangerous animal.
As a result, the effect is similar to what Teppo and Millstein coins as the pursuit to moralize the narrative to legitimize the benefit to all people. This concurrently created an effect where Visser and Kotze conclude that the perceived gentrification was only the fact that the target market was people commonly associated with gentrification. As Visser and Kotze states, "It appears as if apartheid red-lining on racial grounds has been replaced by a financially exclusive property market that entrenches prosperity and privilege." Generally, Atkinson observes that when looking at scholarly discourse for the gentrification and rapid urbanization of South Africa, the main focus is not on the smaller towns of South Africa.
Though one cannot assign a positive value to definitions that may apply to oneself, one remains able to say what one is not. This inner anguish over moral uncertainty is a central underlying theme in existentialism, as the anguish demonstrates a personal feeling of responsibility over the choices one makes throughout life. Without an emphasis on personal choice, one may make use of an external moral system as a tool to moralize otherwise immoral acts, leading to negation of the self. According to existentialism, dedicated professionals of their respective moral codes – priests interpreting sacred scriptures, lawyers interpreting the Constitution, doctors interpreting the Hippocratic oath – should, instead of divesting the self of responsibility in the discharge of their duties, be aware of their own significance in the process.
Ostrow, 609; Dictionary Baglione had known a large number of his subjects personally and his attributions and basic factual information is considered generally reliable, although like Vasari and most intervening biographers of artists, he sometimes repeats anecdotes uncritically. He carefully notes information about the social status and progress of his subjects, and is often very quick to criticise and moralize over human failings and bad habits. He "recorded all signs of social status, including houses, dress, collections, permission to wear a sword, splendid funerals, and tombs." Similarly, he never failed to mention if an artist was a member of his beloved Academy of St. Luke, had been elected to the Virtuosi del Pantheon, had been knighted, had been well paid for his work, or had been employed by noble patrons.
Pisarev was a controversial figure who, on the one hand used to pan 'serious' drama (stating that theatre's mission was to entertain, not moralize) and lambast Pyotr Vyazemsky and Alexander Griboyedov, on the other, was himself a shrewd satirist who ridiculed in his plays and epigrams the life and manners of Russian high society as well as some of his literary contemporaries, notably Nikolai Polevoy.Александр Иванович Писарев at the Lipetsk Encyclopedia Pisarev died of tuberculosis aged only 24, much to the distress of his friends, one of whom, Sergey Aksakov was convinced that in 1828 Russian literature lost one of its greatest talents who had every potential to become the 'Russian Aristophanes'. "All of our vaudevillians of today count less than this one man, Pisarev," wrote Vissarion Belinsky years later.Александр Иванович Писарев.
Pantomime or dumb-show Dumbshow, also dumb show or dumb-show, is defined by the Oxford Dictionary of English as "gestures used to convey a meaning or message without speech; mime." In the theatre the word refers to a piece of dramatic mime in general, or more particularly a piece of action given in mime within a play "to summarise, supplement, or comment on the main action"."dumbshow", The Oxford Dictionary of English, ed. Stevenson, Angus, Oxford University Press, 2010, retrieved 29 November 2015 In the Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, Michael Dobson writes that the dumbshow was originally "an allegorical survival from the morality play". It came into fashion in 16th- century English drama in interludes featuring "personifications of abstract virtues and vices who contend in ways which foreshadow and moralize the fortunes of the play's characters".
For the scene in "Ten of Swords" in which Donna hosts a gala at her house for women in the tech industry, co- creators and showrunners Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C. Rogers wrote a two-page monologue for the character to discuss her experiences in the industry as a woman. Rogers called it the most difficult part of creating the finale, as they did not want to "overtly moralize". He said that throughout the series, they "really tried to live [their] principles... versus advertising them", but that he was still afraid her speech would come across as preachy. However, the duo felt they had earned the opportunity to make "textual what should be subtextual" because of Donna's journey from housewife in the first season to ambitious businesswoman heading a venture capital firm in the final season.
At the time, the opposing Victorian notion reigned, namely, that art, and indeed much human activity, had a moral or social function. To Whistler, however, art was its own end and the artist's responsibility was not to society, but to himself, to interpret through art, and to neither reproduce nor moralize what he saw. Furthermore, he stated, "Nature is very rarely right", and must be improved upon by the artist, with his own vision. Though differing with Whistler on several points, including his insistence that poetry was a higher form of art than painting, Oscar Wilde was generous in his praise and hailed the lecture a masterpiece: > not merely for its clever satire and amusing jests ... but for the pure and > perfect beauty of many of its passages ... for that he is indeed one of the > very greatest masters of painting, in my opinion.
Although these phrases are used in his novels to denote the forces that work in human life, in the poem the unspoken force Hardy suggests may be nature; the pairing of human technology and nature can be seen quite clearly in the poem with all the new technologies of humans set against the bigger force of nature. Hardy discusses that whilst the Titanic was being built, nature too “prepared a sinister mate” (VII, 19) and, in the next stanza, Hardy creates a sense of menace in the lines “And as the smart ship grew/In stature, grace and hue/In shadowy silent distance grew the Iceberg too” (VIII, 22 – 24). Whilst critic Chris Baldick claims Hardy’s The Convergence of the Twain “alludes to a philosophical stance” and that it “carefully refrains from moralizing”, fellow critic Donald Davie claims the poem “very markedly censures the vanity and luxury which created and inhabited the staterooms of the ocean liner” therefore suggesting Hardy does moralize. Chris Baldick.

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