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9 Sentences With "moralised"

How to use moralised in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "moralised" and check conjugation/comparative form for "moralised". Mastering all the usages of "moralised" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Rawlinson published numerous separate sermons and one collected volume, entitled 'Quadriga Salutis, foure Quadrigesmal or Lent Sermons preached at Whitehall,’ Oxford, 1625, dedicated to the prince (Charles). He contributed verses to William Vaughan's Golden Grove moralised, 1600.
The poems of Jenyns, Wilkie and Graeme, The British Poets Vol.71, Chiswick 1822, pp.230–232 Jago's most ambitious publication was the four-part topographical poem, Edge Hill, or the rural prospect delineated and moralised (1767).
Thomas Bewick’s woodcut of the fable in Select Fables of Aesop (1784) The Wolf and the Shepherds is ascribed to Aesop’s Fables and is numbered 453 in the Perry Index. Although related very briefly in the oldest source, some later authors have drawn it out at great length and moralised that perceptions differ according to circumstances.
The tale concludes with an exhortation to all men warning them that, should they scorn their lovers, God will repay the offence.Guillaume, The Romance of the Rose, 24 Guillaume’s rendition builds on the themes of courtly love emphasised in the Lay and moves further away from Ovid’s initial account. The curse of Athena is absent entirely, and the tale is overtly moralised.
There were many cliques in the camp and when some rich businessmen managed to smuggle in some eggs, Liddell shamed them into sharing them. While fellow missionaries formed cliques, moralised and acted selfishly, Liddell busied himself by helping the elderly, teaching Bible classes at the camp school, arranging games, and teaching science to the children, who referred to him as Uncle Eric.Jackson(?), p. 21 It was also claimed that one Sunday Liddell refereed a hockey match to stop fighting amongst the players, as he was trusted not to take sides.
Glen Newey's main research interests were in political philosophy. His work focuses on toleration, the nature of politics, political morality, including the ethics of deception in public life, security, freedom of speech, and the political theory of Thomas Hobbes. He argues that modern liberalism, as defended by John Rawls and his followers, sidelines politics in favour of a moralised account of public life. Latterly, his work concentrated upon the relationship between security and other political concepts, as well as the nature of politics and the relation between freedom and justice.
Unlike Love's Last Shift, which never again performed after the 1690s, The Relapse has retained its audience appeal. In the 18th century, however, its tolerant attitude towards actual and attempted adultery gradually became unacceptable to public opinion, and the original play was for a century replaced on the stage by Sheridan's moralised version A Trip to Scarborough (1777). On the modern stage, The Relapse has been established as one of the most popular Restoration comedies, valued for Vanbrugh's light, throwaway witSee Faller. and the consummate acting part of Lord Foppington, a burlesque character with a dark side.
During the 18th-19th centuries, the term proverbe was being applied to moralised dramatic pieces of one act, which had become popular because they could be played without the need of a stage and allowed for improvisation.Mélanges Tirés D'Une Grande Bibliotheque: Manuel Des Châteaux, Ou Lettres Contenant des conseils pour former une Bibliotheque romanesque, pour diriger une Comédie de Société, & pour diversifier les plaisirs d'un Salon, Paris 1779, p.253 Le Savetier et le Financier was one such 'proverb' that, according to her memoirs, was acted in her dining room by Stéphanie Félicité, comtesse de Genlis and two of her friends in pre- revolutionary days.Memoirs of the Countess de Genlis, New York 1825, vol.1, pp.
One of the earliest appearances in English sources was in John Ogilby's editions of Aesop's fables in which a fox becomes trapped in a larder and is advised by a weasel that is also present there.Illustrated in editions of the 1660s by Francis Cleyn, then by Wenceslas Hollar; see the British Museum site In Sir Roger L'Estrange's retelling only a few decades later, the fox is trapped in a hen-roost and receives the advice from a weasel that is passing outside. Samuel Croxall tells his moralised story of ‘a little starveling, thin-gutted rogue of a mouse‘ who, rather more plausibly than Horace's fox, creeps into a corn basket and attracts a weasel with its cries for help when it cannot get out.The Fables of Aesop, Google Books, Fable 36 More or less the same story was told at the start of the following century by Brooke Boothby in verseFables and Satires, Edinburgh 1809, p.152 and Thomas Bewick in prose.

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