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Definition 2024
Mores
mores
mores
English
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmɔː.reɪz/
Noun
mores pl (plural only)
- A set of moral norms or customs derived from generally accepted practices rather than written laws.
- 1970, Alvin Toffler, Future Shock, Bantam Books, page 99:
- All of us seem to need some totalistic relationships in our lives. But to decry the fact that we cannot have only such relationships is nonsense. And to prefer a society in which the individual has holistic relationships with a few, rather than modular relationships with many, is to wish for a return to the imprisonment of the past — a past when individuals may have been more tightly bound to one another, but when they were also more tightly regimented by social conventions, sexual mores, political and religious restrictions.
- 1973, Philippa Foot, “Nietzsche: The Revaluation of Values” in Nietzsche: A Collection of Critical Essays, edited by Robert C. Solomon, Garden City, New York: Anchor Books, ISBN 0385033443, page 165:
- It is relevant here to recall that the word “morality” is derived from mos with its plural mores, and that in its present usage it has not lost this connexion with the mores — the rules of behaviour — of a society.
- 1970, Alvin Toffler, Future Shock, Bantam Books, page 99:
Translations
a set of accepted moral norms or customs
Etymology 2
Noun
mores
- plural of more
Etymology 3
Verb
mores
- third-person singular simple present indicative form of more
Anagrams
Dutch
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: mo‧res
Etymology
Borrowing from Latin mores (“customs, rules”).
Noun
mores pl (plurale tantum)
- (college) customs, rules
Derived terms
- iemand mores leren - to teach someone a lesson
Latin
Noun
mōrēs
References
- mores in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- Félix Gaffiot (1934), “mores”, in Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français, Paris: Hachette.