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 morally ['mɔrəlɪ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
ad. 道德上, 德性上, 有道德地



    morally
    [ adv ]
    1. with respect to moral principles

    2. <adv.all>
      morally unjustified
    3. in a moral manner

    4. <adv.all>
      he acted morally under the circumstances


    Morally \Mor"al*ly\, adv.
    1. In a moral or ethical sense; according to the rules of
    morality.

    By good, good morally so called, ``bonum honestum''
    ought chiefly to be understood. --South.

    2. According to moral rules; virtuously. ``To live morally.''
    --Dryden.

    3. In moral qualities; in disposition and character; as, one
    who physically and morally endures hardships.

    4. In a manner calculated to serve as the basis of action;
    according to the usual course of things and human
    judgment; according to reason and probability.

    It is morally impossible for an hypocrite to keep
    himself long upon his guard. --L'Estrange.

    1. Jesse Jackson, who once said George Bush was morally unfit to be president, said today he expects a "qualitative change" on civil rights when Bush takes over from President Reagan.
    2. Predictably, when confronted with morally dubious behavior, prosecutors will exploit the latitude such openended statutes give them.
    3. Nobody, however, seemed to have much idea what that meant. Akeler became convinced that protecting the environment was becoming commercially, as well as morally, worthwhile.
    4. To grasp its importance we must attend to every detail of our inner experience, and we will see that each is morally charged.
    5. "I am very upset with what is happening to the American Jewish community," Ms. Dayan said, adding it was "rubbish" for American Jews to hold their tongues when Israel does something morally wrong.
    6. "If (South African President F.W.) de Klerk is not making the renunciation of violence the precondition (to negotiations), because he can't morally justify it, neither should Mandela have to do that," Jackson said.
    7. The payment of claims for wartime atrocities is both morally and technically different from the settlement of transnational contract performance disputes.
    8. While they make a forceful argument on theoretical grounds, their ethics are morally bankrupt.
    9. Now, I believe that you knew this was morally wrong.
    10. Given this almost religious belief in nature's goodness, we'd like to pose a philosophical question: How come nobody has explained why a natural carcinogen is morally superior to an artificial one?
    11. "Over the last year, he has proven himself mentally, morally, spiritually and physically capable of taking over," Batman editor Dennis O'Neil said Thursday. "Today is his rite of passage." The '90s Robin also should help Batman psychologically.
    12. The morally tangled lives of prominent TV evangelists have implications for a political movement described as the "religious right."
    13. He made it intellectually puzzling and morally complex, but kept it light.
    14. Garnishing oil reserves is morally different from taxing the labor of a nation; it is more closely analogous to seizing money in bank accounts, and as a technical matter can be accomplished about as easily.
    15. According to writer Simon Moore, "Traffik" tries to paint a picture of the drug trade that is both morally nuanced and sweeping in scope.
    16. But the NCAA ensures that the player will remain poor after four years and, moreover, has convinced most observers that it would be morally wrong for the college to pay the player a competitively determined wage for his or her services.
    17. Should certain people know this information before others and morally act upon it?
    18. We have become morally sick, because we have gotten used to saying one thing and thinking another.
    19. He said conference members would support the Saudis "morally and, if necessary, militarily." Saudi Arabia recently acquired Chinese CSS-2 missiles, which have a range of 2,200 miles.
    20. "We are morally obliged to," he says, somewhat shaken by the crowd.
    21. The notion that a baby surrendered for adoption is property to be bound in perpetuity by a contract signed by two other parties at his/her birth is morally indefensible.
    22. The group's review of the film dismisses it as a "witless spoof of Vatican officialdom," but a spokeswoman said "The Pope" didn't make the "morally offensive" list.
    23. That's just morally and ethically wrong." Gibbons' proposed surtax effectively would have added $150 in taxes a year for every $10,000 in federal income taxes paid by an individual, family or company.
    24. Above all, they still look to Mr. Havel, the morally principled playwright-president, for unifying leadership.
    25. Convinced that he was "right morally" but would have a "tough time legally," Mr. Walsh threw jurisprudence to the wind and opted for a show trial.
    26. Johnson, who says he is morally opposed to providing condoms on campus, added that a law adopted in 1789 also may make distribution illegal.
    27. Critics of fetal tissue research envision abortion-for-profit from tissue sales and foresee organ "parts shops" in hospitals. Proponents counter that researchers are steering a morally neutral course.
    28. It pushed back the boundaries of what is morally permitted in the pursuit of self interest.
    29. It is morally acceptable for a doctor to administer a drug to kill pain even if the immediate or longer-term consequence is the death of the patient.
    30. But federal drug czar William Bennett has branded legalization as "stupid and morally atrocious." "It doesn't make any sense," Bennett has said. "It is becoming something of a fashion to believe this (legalization) in certain circles of opinion.
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