Roget's Thesaurus by Peter Mark Roget
3. MORAL CONDITIONS
1359 words | Chapter 191
#939. Probity.—N. probity, integrity, rectitude; uprightness &c.
adj.; honesty, faith; honor; bonne foi[Fr], good faith, bona
fides[Lat]; purity, clean hands. fairness &c. adj.; fair play, justice,
equity, impartiality, principle, even-handedness; grace. constancy;
faithfulness &c. adj.; fidelity, loyalty; incorruption,
incorruptibility. trustworthiness &c. adj.; truth, candor, singleness
of heart; veracity &c. 543; tender conscience &c. (sense of duty) 926.
punctilio, delicacy, nicety; scrupulosity, scrupulousness &c. adj.;
scruple; point, point of honor; punctuality. dignity &c, (repute) 873;
respectability, respectableness &c. adj; gentilhomme[Fr], gentleman;
man of honor, man of his word; fidus Achates[Lat][obs3], preux
chevalier[Fr], galantuomo[It]; truepenny[obs3], trump, brick; true
Briton; white man * [U.S.]. court of honor, a fair field and no favor;
argumentum ad verecundiam[Lat]. V. be honorable &c. adj.; deal
honorably, deal squarely, deal impartially, deal fairly; speak the
truth &c. (veracity) 543; draw a straight furrow; tell the truth and
shame the Devil, vitam impendere vero[Lat]; show a proper spirit, make
a point of; do one's duty &c. (virtue) 944. redeem one's pledge &c.
926; keep one's promise, be as good as one's promise, be as good as
one's word; keep faith with, not fail. give and take, audire alteram
partem[Lat], give the Devil his due, put the saddle on the right horse.
redound to one's honor. Adj. upright; honest, honest as daylight;
veracious &c. 543; virtuous &c. 944; honorable; fair, right, just,
equitable, impartial, evenhanded, square; fair and aboveboard, open and
aboveboard; white * [U.S.]. constant, constant as the northern star;
faithful, loyal, staunch; true, true blue, true to one's colors, true
to the core, true as the needle to the pole; "marble-constant" [Antony
and Cleopatra]; true-hearted, trusty, trustworthy; as good as one's
word, to be depended on, incorruptible. straightforward &c. (ingenuous)
703; frank, candid, open-hearted. conscientious, tender-conscienced,
right-minded; high-principled, high-minded; scrupulous, religious,
strict; nice, punctilious, correct, punctual; respectable, reputable;
gentlemanlike[obs3]. inviolable, inviolate; unviolated[obs3], unbroken,
unbetrayed; unbought, unbribed[obs3]. innocent &c. 946; pure,
stainless; unstained, untarnished, unsullied, untainted,
unperjured[obs3]; uncorrupt, uncorrupted; undefiled, undepraved[obs3],
undebauched[obs3]; integer vitae scelerisque purus [Lat][Horace];
justus et tenax propositi [Lat][Horace]. chivalrous, jealous of honor,
sans peur et sans reproche[Fr]; high- spirited. supramundane[obs3],
unworldly, other-worldly, overscrupulous[obs3]. Adv. honorable &c.
adj.; bona fide; on the square, in good faith, honor bright, foro
conscientiae[Lat], with clean hands. Phr. "a face untaught to feign"
[Pope]; bene qui latuit bene vixit [Lat][Ovid]; mens sibi conscia
recti[Lat]; probitas laudatur et alget [Lat][obs3][Juvenal]; fidelis ad
urnam[Lat]; "his heart as far from fraud as heaven from earth" [Two
Gentlemen]; loyaute m'oblige[Fr]; loyaute n'a honte[Fr]; "what stronger
breastplate than a heart untainted?" [Henry VI].
#940. Improbity.—N. improbity[obs3]; dishonesty, dishonor;
deviation from rectitude; disgrace &c. (disrepute) 874; fraud &c.
(deception) 545; lying &c. 544; bad faith, Punic faith; mala
fides[Lat], Punica fides[Lat]; infidelity; faithlessness &c. adj.;
Judas kiss, betrayal. breach of promise, breach of trust, breach of
faith; prodition|, disloyalty, treason, high treason; apostasy &c.
(tergiversation) 607; nonobservance &c. 773. shabbiness &c. adj.;
villainy, villany[obs3]; baseness &c. adj.; abjection, debasement,
turpitude, moral turpitude, laxity, trimming, shuffling. perfidy;
perfidiousness &c. adj.; treachery, double dealing; unfairness &c.
adj.; knavery, roguery, rascality, foul play; jobbing, jobbery; graft,
bribery; venality, nepotism; corruption, job, shuffle, fishy
transaction; barratry, sharp practice, heads I win tails you lose;
mouth honor &c. (flattery) 933. V. be dishonest &c. adj.; play false;
break one's word, break one's faith, break one's promise; jilt, betray,
forswear; shuffle &c. (lie) 544; live by one's wits, sail near the
wind. disgrace oneself, dishonor oneself, demean oneself; derogate,
stoop, grovel, sneak, lose caste; sell oneself, go over to the enemy;
seal one's infamy. Adj. dishonest, dishonorable; unconscientious,
unscrupulous; fraudulent &c. 545; knavish; disgraceful &c.
(disreputable) 974; wicked &c. 945. false-hearted, disingenuous;
unfair, one-sided; double, double- hearted, double-tongued,
double-faced; timeserving[obs3], crooked, tortuous,insidious,
Machiavelian, dark, slippery; fishy; perfidious, treacherous, perjured.
infamous, arrant, foul, base, vile, ignominious, blackguard.
contemptible, unrespectable, abject, mean, shabby, little, paltry,
dirty, scurvy, scabby, sneaking, groveling, scrubby, rascally,
pettifogging; beneath one. low-minded, low-thoughted[obs3];
base-minded. undignified, indign|; unbecoming, unbeseeming[obs3],
unbefitting; derogatory, degrading; infra dignitatem [Latin: beneath
one's dignity]; ungentlemanly, ungentlemanlike; unknightly[obs3],
unchivalric[obs3], unmanly, unhandsome; recreant, inglorious. corrupt,
venal; debased, mongrel. faithless, of bad faith, false, unfaithful,
disloyal; untrustworthy; trustless, trothless[obs3]; lost to shame,
dead to honor; barratrous. Adv. dishonestly &c. adj.; mala fide[Lat],
like a thief in the night, by crooked paths. Int. O tempora[obs3]! O
mores! [Cicero]. Phr. corruptissima respublica plurimae leges
[Lat][Tacitus].
#941. Knave.—N. knave, rogue; Scapin[obs3], rascal; Lazarillo de
Tormes; bad man &c. 949; blackguard &c. 949; barrater[obs3],
barrator[obs3]; shyster [U.S..]. traitor, betrayer, archtraitor[obs3],
conspirator, Judas, Catiline; reptile, serpent, snake in the grass,
wolf in sheep's clothing, sneak, Jerry Sneak, squealer*, tell-tale,
mischief-maker; trimmer, fence-sitter, renegade &c. (tergiversation)
607; truant, recreant; sycophant &c. (servility) 886.
#942. Disinterestedness.—N. disinterestedness &c. adj.; generosity;
liberality, liberalism; altruism; benevolence &c. 906; elevation,
loftiness of purpose, exaltation, magnanimity; chivalry, chivalrous
spirit; heroism, sublimity. self-denial, self-abnegation,
self-sacrifice, self-immolation, self- control &c. (resolution) 604;
stoicism, devotion, martyrdom, suttee. labor of love. V. be
disinterested &c. adj.; make a sacrifice, lay one's head on the block;
put oneself in the place of others, do as one would be done by, do unto
others as we would men should do unto us. Adj. disinterested;
unselfish; self-denying, self-sacrificing, self- devoted; generous.
handsome, liberal, noble, broad-minded; noble-minded, high-minded;
princely, great, high, elevated, lofty, exalted, spirited, stoical,
magnanimous; great-hearted, large-hearted; chivalrous, heroic, sublime.
unbought, unbribed[obs3]; uncorrupted &c. (upright) 939. Phr. non vobis
solum[Lat].
#943. Selfishness.—N. selfishness &c. adj.; self-love, self-
indulgence, self-worship, self-interest; egotism, egoism; amour
propre[Fr],&c. (vanity) 880; nepotism. worldliness &c. adj.; world
wisdom. illiberality; meanness &c. adj. time-pleaser, time-server;
tuft-hunter, fortune-hunter; jobber, worldling; egotist, egoist,
monopolist, nepotist; dog in the manger, charity that begins at home;
canis in praesepi[Lat], "foes to nobleness," temporizer, trimmer. V. be
selfish &c. adj.; please oneself, indulge oneself, coddle oneself;
consult one's own wishes, consult one's own pleasure; look after one's
own interest; feather one's nest; take care of number one, have an eye
to the main chance, know on which side one's bread is buttered; give an
inch and take an ell. Adj. selfish; self-seeking, self-indulgent,
self-interested, self- centered; wrapped up in self, wrapt up in
self[obs3], centered in self; egotistic, egotistical; egoistical[obs3].
illiberal, mean, ungenerous, narrow-minded; mercenary, venal; covetous
&c. 819. unspiritual, earthly, earthly-minded; mundane; worldly,
worldly- minded; worldly-wise; timeserving[obs3]. interested; alieni
appetens sui profusus[Lat]. Adv. ungenerously &c. adj.; to gain some
private ends, from interested motives. Phr. apres nous le deluge[Fr].
#944. Virtue.—N. virtue; virtuousness &c. adj.; morality; moral
rectitude; integrity &c. (probity) 939; nobleness &c. 873. morals;
ethics &c. (duty) 926; cardinal virtues. merit, worth, desert,
excellence, credit; self-control &c. (resolution) 604; self-denial &c.
(temperance) 953. well-doing; good actions, good behavior; discharge of
duty, fulfillment of duty, performance of duty; well-spent life;
innocence &c. 946. V. be virtuous &c. adj.; practice virtue &c.n.; do
one's duty, fulfill one's duty, perform one's duty, discharge one's
duty; redeem one's pledge, keep one's promise &c. 926; act well, act
one's part; fight the good fight; acquit oneself well; command one's
passions, master one's passions; keep in the right path. set an
example, set a good example; be on one's good behavior, be on one's
best behavior. Adj. virtuous, good; innocent &c. 946; meritorious,
deserving, worthy, desertful[obs3], correct; dutiful, duteous; moral;
right, righteous, right- minded; well-intentioned, creditable,
laudable, commendable, praiseworthy; above all praise, beyond all
praise; excellent, admirable; sterling, pure, noble;
whole-souled[obs3]. exemplary; matchless, peerless; saintly,
saint-like; heaven-born, angelic, seraphic, godlike. Adv. virtuously
&c, adj.; e merito[Lat]. Phr. esse quam videri bonus malebat
[Lat][Sallust]; Schonheit vergeht Tugend besteht[Ger]; "virtue the
greatest of all monarchies" [Swift]; virtus laudatur et alget
[Lat][obs3][Juvenal]; virtus vincit invidiam[Lat].
#945. Vice.—N. vice; evil-doing, evil courses; wrongdoing;
wickedness, viciousness &c. adj.; iniquity, peccability[obs3], demerit;
sin, Adam|!; old Adam[obs3], offending Adam[obs3]. immorality,
impropriety, indecorum, scandal, laxity, looseness of morals;
enphagy[obs3], dophagy[obs3], exophagy[obs3]; want of principle, want
of ballast; obliquity, backsliding, infamy, demoralization,
pravity[obs3], depravity, pollution; hardness of heart; brutality &c.
(malevolence) 907; corruption &c. (debasement) 659; knavery &c.
(improbity) 940[obs3]; profligacy; flagrancy, atrocity; cannibalism;
lesbianism, Sadism. infirmity; weakness &c. adj.; weakness of the
flesh, frailty, imperfection; error; weak side; foible; failing,
failure; crying sin, besetting sin; defect, deficiency; cloven foot.
lowest dregs of vice, sink of iniquity, Alsatian den[obs3]; gusto
picaresco[It]. fault, crime; criminality &c. (guilt) 947. sinner &c.
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