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Definition of ethic noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

ethic

noun
 
/ˈeθɪk/
 
/ˈeθɪk/
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  1. ethics
    [plural] moral principles that control or influence a person’s behaviour
    • professional/business/medical ethics
    • to draw up a code of ethics
    • He began to question the ethics of his position.
    Topics Personal qualitiesb2
  2. [singular] a system of moral principles or rules of behaviour
    • The ethic of personal achievement is very strong in Western societies.
    see also Protestant ethic, work ethic
  3. ethics
    [uncountable] the branch of philosophy that deals with moral principles
  4. Word Originlate Middle English (denoting ethics or moral philosophy; also used attributively): from Old French éthique, from Latin ethice, from Greek (hē) ēthikē (tekhnē) ‘(the science of) morals’, based on ēthos ‘nature, disposition’, (plural) ‘customs’.
See ethic in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee ethic in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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