Immoral Meaning in English
word
/ˌɪˈmɔɹəɫ/
i-MOR-uhl
/ɪmˈɒɹəl/
i-MO-ruhl
释义
Not following accepted standards of right and wrong; considered wrong or bad by society or moral beliefs.
用法与细微差别
'Immoral' is formal and describes actions or people judged as against moral standards (e.g., 'immoral conduct'). It is often stronger than 'wrong'. Be careful not to confuse with 'amoral' (having no sense of right or wrong). Common collocations: 'immoral behavior', 'immoral act', 'immoral person'.
Spanish: inmoralPortuguese (BR): imoralPortuguese (PT): imoralChinese (Simplified): 不道德Chinese (Traditional): 不道德Hindi: अनैतिकArabic: غير أخلاقيBengali: অনৈতিক - নীতিবর্জিতRussian: аморальныйJapanese: 不道徳なVietnamese: vô đạo đứcKorean: 비도덕적인Turkish: ahlaksızUrdu: غیر اخلاقیIndonesian: tidak bermoral
例句
Stealing is considered immoral.
basic
Many people think lying is immoral.
basic
The teacher said cheating on exams is immoral.
basic
Many argue that polluting the environment is deeply immoral.
natural
He refused the deal, calling it immoral and unfair.
natural
Some business practices may be legal but still seen as immoral.
natural