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What is the noun for ethicize?

What's the noun for ethicize? Here's the word you're looking for.

ethos
  1. The character or fundamental values of a person, people, culture, or movement.
  2. (rhetoric) A form of rhetoric in which the writer or speaker invokes their authority, competence or expertise in an attempt to persuade others that their view is correct.
  3. (aesthetics) The traits in a work of art which express the ideal or typic character, as influenced by the ethos (character or fundamental values) of a people, rather than realistic or emotional situations or individual character in a narrow sense; opposed to pathos.
  4. Synonyms:
  5. Examples:
    1. “Their willingness to lend a hand and to help a mate typifies the spirit of the Aussie digger and the ethos of the Australian Army.”
      “The two married an industrial ethic to a modernist aesthetic, capturing an entire ethos in a single seat.”
      “The school's academic reputation and positive ethos attracts children from as far afield as Linlithgow and Alloa.”
ethics
  1. (philosophy) The study of principles relating to right and wrong conduct.
  2. Morality.
  3. The standards that govern the conduct of a person, especially a member of a profession.
  4. Synonyms:
  5. Examples:
    1. “We enforce strict ethics within this company that must be adhered to at all times.”
      “The ethics and interests of film producers and film archivists are sometimes in opposition.”
      “Brown makes clear that the group is not trying to teach all of journalistic ethics in a day-long seminar.”
ethic
ethicist
  1. A person, especially a philosopher, who studies ethics (principles governing right and wrong conduct).
  2. A person who advocates a particular set of principles governing right and wrong conduct.
  3. Examples:
    1. “The animal care committee has non-medical citizen members, an ethicist, and veterinarians as well as researchers.”
      “The future of becoming an ethicist greatly excites me but also fills me with trepidation.”
      “This type of experience cannot be taught in an academic setting but nevertheless is an essential element to the training of an ethicist.”
ethology
  1. (zoology) The scientific study of human and animal behaviour.
  2. (obsolete) The study of the human ethos.
  3. Examples:
    1. “Patrick Bateson is professor of ethology at the University of Cambridge's zoology department, of which he has also been head.”
      “In 1965 Goodall earned her Ph.D. in ethology from England's Cambridge University.”
      “This intellectual travelogue takes readers on a tour through ethology, the scientific discipline focusing on animal behavior.”
ethicality
  1. The state, quality, or manner of being ethical.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Such research would be valuable and should examine both the effectiveness of fear appeals in ads as well as perceptions of the ethicality of these tactics.”
      “Quite unmindfully, organizational practices can evolve that either insure a company's ethicality or future of dubious activity.”
      “In the meantime, an essential first step is to begin examining tests in terms of ethicality and bias.”
ethicalism
  1. ethical beliefs and behaviour generally
ethicalness
unethicality
  1. The quality of being unethical.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “These environmental, social, and psychological factors likely help drive the increased unethicality observed among upper-class individuals.”
      “Arguments both affirming and contesting the unethicality of political advertising, especially negative advertising, appears to come out most heavily on the side of unethicality.”
      “It is unethicality when an entity acts intentionally to gain some advantage, or inflict some loss over another entity who is either unaware of such intention, or defenseless against it.”
ethologist
  1. A person who studies ethology.
  2. Examples:
    1. “Sixty years ago the great ethologist Niko Tinbergen noticed a stickleback fish aggressively displaying toward the window of his fish tank.”
      “Initially trained as a classical comparative ethologist, he learned the disciplines of meticulous observation and objective description.”
      “Following years of observation, American ethologist, Donald Griffin, proclaimed the existence of an animal consciousness.”
ethicism
  1. The application of ethics.
  2. Examples:
    1. “They focused on ethicism in their advertising to appeal to the growing green market.”
ethick
  1. Obsolete form of ethic.
ethicology
  1. The study of ethics.
ethician
  1. (rare) An ethicist.
ethe
ethical
  1. An ethical drug.
unethicalities
ethicalisms
  1. plural of ethicalism
ethologists
  1. plural of ethologist
  2. Examples:
    1. “For example, ethologists generally agree that play in young animals is not escapist, but adaptive.”
      “Recently, ethologists have applied the study of animal behavior to an increasing number of problems relating to conserving rare, declining, and threatened animal species.”
      “Because of the broad range of his interests, John was always alert to the ways in which concepts and data from other fields might be useful to ornithologists and ethologists.”
ethicalities
ethicians
  1. plural of ethician
ethicisms
  1. plural of ethicism
ethicists
  1. plural of ethicist
  2. Examples:
    1. “This balance in opinion, which ethicists call equipoise, provides the ideal context for conducting a trial.”
      “Some embryologists and ethicists insist that only after the primitive streak develops can this being be called an embryo.”
      “Doctors may offload their ethical problems on clinical ethicists, abnegating their moral responsibilities too easily.”
ethologies
  1. plural of ethology
ethicals
  1. plural of ethical
ethicks
  1. plural of ethick
ethoi
  1. (hypercorrect) plural of ethos
ethea
  1. plural of ethos
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “These three valuational attitudes form a triangle of mutually opposing ethea.”
      “The place of this region is called the ethea of animals and refers to the place outside the domain of Greek culture, to the place of the barbarian who resists domestication.”
      “The question arises from a limited ethos combined with its universalization, which transgresses its own limits, and its claim to authority over other ethea.”
ethoses
  1. (nonstandard) plural of ethos
  2. Examples:
    1. “We may have run out of anti-capitalist ethoses to give products a patina of cool.”
      “The contrast between two distinct ethoses of hope is evident even within the same story, separated merely by a single generation.”
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