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  1. immoral in American English. (ɪˈmɔrəl ) adjective. 1. not in conformity with accepted principles of right and wrong behavior. 2. wicked. 3. not in conformity with the accepted standards of proper sexual behavior; unchaste; lewd.

  2. XML. Back Matter. Download. XML. This book explores a much-neglected area of moral philosophy--the typology of immorality. Ronald D. Milo questions the adequacy of Aristotle's suggestion t...

  3. immorality - WordReference English dictionary, questions, discussion and forums. All Free. ... Inflections of 'immorality' (n noun: Refers to person, place, ...

  4. immoral /ɪ ˈ morəl/ adjective. Britannica Dictionary definition of IMMORAL. [more immoral; most immoral] : not morally good or right : morally evil or wrong. Don't condemn her: there was nothing immoral about what she did. It was immoral of her to tell lies like that. immoral behavior/acts. — compare amoral, moral.

  5. It’s immoral to be rich while people are starving and homeless. 2 RUDE/OBSCENE not following accepted standards of sexual behaviour — immorally adverb — immorality / ˌɪməˈræləti / noun [uncountable] the immorality of bombing civilians Examples from the Corpus immoral • Or what is moral or immoral.

  6. immorality translate: imoralidade. Learn more in the Cambridge English-Portuguese Dictionary.

  7. an immoral act/life/person; They were charged with living off immoral earnings (= money earned by working as a prostitute). compare amoral, moral. See immoral in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary See immoral in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English