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    Im·mor·al
    /i(m)ˈmôrəl/

    adjective

    • 1. not conforming to accepted standards of morality: "an immoral and unwinnable war"
  2. IMMORAL definition: 1. morally wrong, or outside society's standards of acceptable, honest, and moral behaviour: 2…. Learn more.

  3. Use the adjective immoral to describe a person, group, or situation that intentionally goes against accepted ideas of what is right, like a government that attacks its own people, or a friend who steals your favorite spatula.

  4. Definition of immoral adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  5. 4 days ago · 1. transgressing accepted moral rules; corrupt. 2. sexually dissolute; profligate or promiscuous. 3. unscrupulous or unethical. immoral trading. 4. tending to corrupt or resulting from corruption.

  6. adjective. uk / ɪˈmɒr ə l / us. Add to word list. B2. morally wrong: immoral behaviour. immorality. noun [ U ] uk / ˌɪməˈræləti / us. (Definition of immoral from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Translations of immoral. in Chinese (Traditional) 不道德的,道德敗壞的… See more. in Chinese (Simplified) 不道德的,道德败坏的… See more.

  7. immoral. adjective. /ɪˈmɔrəl/ , /ɪˈmɑrəl/. (of people and their behavior) not considered to be good or honest by most people It's immoral to steal. There's nothing immoral about wanting to earn more money.

  8. 1. transgressing accepted moral rules; corrupt. 2. sexually dissolute; profligate or promiscuous. 3. unscrupulous or unethical: immoral trading. 4. tending to corrupt or resulting from corruption: an immoral film; immoral earnings. imˈmorally adv.

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