moralistically การใช้
- He said the movement cannot fairly be portrayed as moralistically bullying.
- I'm moralistically bankrupt,"
- I saw one the other night on the tube, in a suit and tie, talking moralistically.
- "So you move him into the center, move him into something that's perhaps more moralistically palatable.
- Feminism is shot through with puritanical Judeo-Christian assumptions, which exalt the soul over the body and moralistically devalue the physical realm.
- Kingsley banged his fork against his plate and said : " You have to look at these journeys as an actor, not moralistically.
- Fletcher has taken facts and presented them in such a way that it should make it moralistically impossible for this incident not to be looked at again .
- They approached it moralistically, while the tabloids from day one went after the Nicole story, her sexual allure, which is the only way to make sense of the crime.
- The Books of Hours ends with the Office of the Dead : repeated depictions of funerals and burials that loop back to, and moralistically shade, the temporal images of seasons and stars with which the volume opened.
- This will provide a connection between the three Dantians ( the elixir fields at the upper, middle and lower regions of the body ) . " Li Shizhen moralistically warns, " This is a small skill practiced by alchemists.
- One source for the information was a'phantom'( unnamed ) correspondent for the New York Evening Sun and the second was Leonard Wood, a " moralistically intolerant " person who was later believed by many in the Army to have stabbed his friend Lawton in the back.
- Indeed, Foucault states that at the start of the 18th century, there was an emergence of " . . . a political, economic, and technical incitement to talk about sex, " . . . with self-appointed experts speaking both moralistically and rationally on sex, the latter sort trying to categorize it.
- Strindberg also considers that Nora s involvement with an illegal financial fraud that involved Nora forging a signature, all done behind her husband s back, and then Nora s lying to her husband regarding Krogstad s blackmail, are serious crimes that should raise questions at the end of the play, when Nora is moralistically judging her husband.