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immoral

intermediateB2

/ɪˈmɔːrəl/ · im-mo-ral

Not conforming to accepted standards of morality.

Meanings

adjectiveformal

Not conforming to accepted standards of morality.

قبول شدہ اخلاقی معیاروں کے مطابق نہیں۔

غیر اخلاقی

ghair ikhlaqi

Synonyms

unethicalimmoralwrongغیراخلاقیبے ہودہناپاک

Antonyms

moralethicalrighteousاخلاقینیکصالح

Common Collocations

  • immoral behavior
  • immoral actions
  • immoral practices

Example Sentences

His immoral actions led to severe consequences.

اس کے غیر اخلاقی اقدامات نے سنگین نتائج کا سامنا کیا۔

Us ke ghair ikhlaqi iqdamat ne sangeen nataij ka samna kiya.

The book discusses the immoral nature of certain business practices.

کتاب کچھ کاروباری طریقوں کی غیر اخلاقی فطرت پر بحث کرتی ہے۔

Kitaab kuch karobari tareeqon ki ghair ikhlaqi fitrat par behas karti hai.

Many considered his decisions to be immoral due to their impact on others.

بہت سے لوگوں نے اس کے فیصلوں کو دوسرے لوگوں پر اثر ڈالنے کی بنا پر غیر اخلاقی سمجھا۔

Bahut se logon ne is ke faislon ko doosre logon par asar dalne ki buniyad par ghair ikhlaqi samjha.

Easily Confused With

amoral:Amoral refers to something that is neither moral nor immoral; it is indifferent to morality.

Word Family

immorality
nounغیر اخلاقیت
moral
adjectiveاخلاقی

See Also

💡 Memory Tip

Remember 'immoral' as the opposite of 'moral', like a road diverging from a common path.

Imagine a broken scale of justice representing the imbalance of moral values.

✍️ Urdu Poetry

ہوئی ہے شمع یار کی باتیں خلافِ انداز، / کیا دنیا میں ہو سکتا ہے، کچھ بھی غیر اخلاقی؟

Hui hai sham'a yaar ki baatein khilaf-e-andaz, / Kya duniya mein ho sakta hai, kuch bhi ghair ikhlaqi?

The talks of the beloved are against the style, / Can anything be immoral in this world?

Unknown, Unverified

* Poetry attribution is AI-generated and may require verification.

🗣️ Urdu Proverb

بروں کے ساتھ بیٹھنے والے بروں کی طرح ہو جاتے ہیں۔

Baron ke saath baithne wale baron ki tarah ho jate hain.

Those who sit with the wicked become like them.

📖 Etymology

Origin: Latin "immoralis" — not moral

First known use: 15th century

Derived from the Latin root 'moral', prefixed with 'im-' to indicate negation since the 15th century.