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'mores' is a correct and usable word in written English
'Mores' is a plural noun which is used to refer to the moral principles and customs of a particular society. Example Sentence: It's important to learn about the mores of different cultures when travelling.
Dictionary
mores
noun
A set of moral norms or customs derived from generally accepted practices rather than written laws.
synonyms
Exact(60)
Christopher Reid's work, by contrast, I love for its wry and always well-mannered outsider's take on contemporary mores.
And yet, despite changing British mores over the decades and a succession of editors, including Rebekah Wade (later Brooks) and David Yelland who were both widely reported before their appointments to consider Page 3 outdated, its position in the paper has until now remained unassailable.
I love a nice frock as much as the next woman, but I am also concerned that the industry often operates in a moral vacuum, arrogantly isolating itself from social mores and moral codes by which the rest of us are not only expected to live but are actually perfectly happy to abide by.
Chilean artists, writers and musicians have long made the city their home, drawn to its picturesque location and bohemian mores – Nobel prize-winning poet Pablo Neruda is one notable former resident.
Schools no longer simply teach French, science or geography; they occupy a pivotal role in society, passing on cultural traditions and common mores alongside preparing new generations for their lives ahead.
The training will also familiarise Ukraine with Western military mores.
Mr Cameron and his cronies, they grumble, possess the mores of a metropolitan elite, ignore MPs' views and allow the party's grassroots to wither.
The Diamond Jubilee has prompted a slew of new royal biographies, making familiar points about how the monarchy has shrewdly adapted to modern mores.
O tempora, o mores.
Social mores have changed the nature of some antics: gone is the 1974 caper of smoking 110 cigarettes at a time for 30 seconds, for example, as well as feats of derring-do with alcohol.People are intrinsically interested in the superlatives of human experience, thinks Nick Couldry of Goldsmiths, University of London.
A Finnish journalist colleague invites Mr Brown to feel her thigh: she is wearing suspenders and a garter belt in what she coyly tells him is a protest against the church's repressive sexual mores.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com