0 past simple and past participle of moralize --
1 to express judgments about what is morally right and wrong: --
his parents' self-righteous moralizing
Affable, eloquent, but succinct in expression, his statements often moralized against the improvident profusion in spending.
The moralized counterpart of a directed acyclic graph is formed by connecting nodes that have a common child, and then making all edges in the graph undirected.
The "thema" was then restated and followed by the process, a breakdown of multiple parts of the "thema" the historical, allegorical (personified), tropological (moralized), and anagogical (the mystical).
As the title implies, this version is both more sinister and more overtly moralized than the later ones.
Refined cuisine could be moralized as a sign of either civilized progress or decadent decline.
Every piece of information he took in became true only when he digested it and moralized it.
As more women wrote the genre, it became increasingly moralized.
Wertheimer favours a 'moralized' baseline: coercion exists when one threatens to make others worse off than they have a right to be.