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Discover LudwigThe phrase "scruples about" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to a person's moral or ethical concerns or hesitations about something. Example: The CEO had no scruples about exploiting his workers for profit.
Exact(60)
"I have no scruples about violence.
Nor does she have many scruples about her allies.
Gazprom has no scruples about using its muscle to buy such assets.
Chinese government officials have no scruples about playing off foreigners against each other.
Scruples about necessary connections also generated a third class of difficulties for Hempel's project.
But the corollary has been a lack of scruples about sending individuals to the continent.
Society can't afford too many scruples about the privacy of those who provoke such suspicions.
Did you have any moral scruples about it at the time?
Here is one: "He [Mao] had no scruples about taking human life".
"I didn't have any scruples about getting a blade or stabbing screws".
Sebald has his own scruples about the "morally questionable process of falsification.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com