What is another word for moralising?

Pronunciation: [mˈɒɹəlˌa͡ɪzɪŋ] (IPA)

Moralising is a term used to describe someone who is preaching or lecturing about what is right and wrong. There are plenty of synonyms that capture this concept, ranging from scolding and admonishing to moralizing and sermonizing. Other possible substitutes for moralising include pontificating, lecturing, sermonising, and hectoring. Each of these words has a slightly different connotation, but all of them can be used to describe someone who is giving a lecture or advice in a preachy or pedantic way. It's important to use these synonyms carefully and thoughtfully to avoid sounding condescending or preachy.

Synonyms for Moralising:

What are the hypernyms for Moralising?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Moralising

It is very probable that there is an element of truth in the idea that the care of offspring has had a moralising effect upon women, and that this effect has acquired the power of a hereditary characteristic; at the same time, it must be remembered that other causes are also in operation which prevent women figuring as largely in criminal returns as men.
"Crime and Its Causes"
William Douglas Morrison
It will not be quite so small, because no public institution, however well conducted, can ever exercise so moralising an effect as a good home, but it will be much smaller than if he grew up to maturity under the pernicious surroundings of a criminal home.
"Crime and Its Causes"
William Douglas Morrison
Besides, it is not the "literary historian," the moralising and quill-driving "historians," as conceived by Daunou and his school, that we have had in view; we are here only concerned with those scholars and historians who intend to deal with documents in order to facilitate or actually perform the scientific work of history.
"Introduction to the Study of History"
Charles V. Langlois Charles Seignobos

Famous quotes with Moralising

  • He reduced everything to politics; he was also unalterably of the Left. His line may have been unpopular or unfashionable, but he followed it unhesitatingly; in fact it was an obsession. He could not blow his nose without moralising on conditions in the handkerchief industry.
    Cyril Connolly
  • He could not blow his nose without moralising on conditions in the handkerchief industry.This ruling purpose is the secret of his best writing but far too evident in his worst.
    George Orwell
  • The expansion of Europe was a phenomenon of such magnitude with such a profound and irreversible effect on humankind that it might be thought that our moralising tendency would be silenced in the face of it. But as we saw on the 500th anniversary of Columbus's voyage in 1992, there are those who think that its disastrous consequences for indigenous people make it quite definitely a bad thing which should not have happened. Unprovoked invasion of the territory of another society is immoral by our standards and breaches current international law, but if these be the standards we apply to history there will be no end to our condemning.
    John Hirst

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