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mores
[ mawr-eyz, -eez, mohr- ]
plural noun
- folkways of central importance accepted without question and embodying the fundamental moral views of a group.
mores
/ ˈmɔːreɪz /
plural noun
- sociol the customs and conventions embodying the fundamental values of a group or society
mores
- The customs and manners of a social group or culture . Mores often serve as moral guidelines for acceptable behavior but are not necessarily religious or ethical.
Word History and Origins
Origin of mores1
Word History and Origins
Origin of mores1
Compare Meanings
How does mores compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:
Example Sentences
Each performer made the dialogue ring true to contemporary mores.
Rather, it was the thrust-and-parry of the pair, their gently barbed, whipsmart badinage, that made Nichols and May so revolutionary, their routines about sexual politics and social mores riding a knife’s edge.
We’ve been led to believe that things work in a certain way, that there are mores and norms.
Then, feigning originalism in Dobbs, they vitiated Equal Protection, elevating the legal rights of zygotes over those of living, breathing women, citing 12th-century mores when men like Alito burned women like me at the stake.
Raisi’s tenure was marked by high unemployment, a dismal economy, political repression and strict social mores.
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