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Discover Ludwig"have scruples" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe someone who makes decisions based on their own moral judgement and principles. For example, "My friend refuses to lie even when it would be beneficial for her, she has scruples."
Exact(11)
No, of course I do have scruples.
"You can't govern well if you have scruples," Salvador's sister replies.
"You have scruples, but you will get used to this," Kotooshu was reported as saying in the tabloid magazine Shukan Gendai.
Cinemas don't have scruples about showing two or three short films about not using phones and that even the light of the screen is disturbing to others.
"Why should I have scruples when men have been using me for years?" Trumpet is, in a consciously much more subtle way, very much about revelation.
(Mr Ma does not have scruples about calling Mr Hu president, even though Taiwan's curious constitution could be construed as making Mr Ma president of Taiwan, mainland China and even Mongolia).China happily receives KMT visitors.
Similar(49)
Call it cheating if you want, but having scruples can be costly.
"In the New World, no one has scruples when the moment calls for violence.
"If you want to beat the killers at their own game," she tells Bobby, "you have to become one yourself". Bobby still has scruples.
Of the politician who dirties his hands in a good cause but realises he is acting immorally, Walzer writes: "Because he has scruples of this sort we know him to be a good man.
Sebald has his own scruples about the "morally questionable process of falsification.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com