English edit

Verb edit

remoralise (third-person singular simple present remoralises, present participle remoralising, simple past and past participle remoralised)

  1. Alternative form of remoralize
    • 1996, P. T. Forsyth, The Person and Place of Jesus Christ, page 218:
      It remoralises the whole issue by restoring it to personal religion.
    • 2014, Michael Murray, Critical Health Psychology, page 67:
      Today, we see a tendency to remoralise illness in the demand that the sufferer take responsibility for disease and standardised health.
    • 2018, Dorothy Wilson, Thomas Wilson, The State and Social Welfare: The Objectives of Policy, page 87:
      First of all it is argued that because of moral diversity it is necessary for the state to be neutral between different conceptions of the good, a claim which cannot be sustained if part of the job of the state is to remoralise the poor.