Word family noun moral morals morality ≠ immorality moralist amorality adjective moral ≠ immoral amoral moralistic verb moralize adverb morally ≠ immorally
From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishamorala‧mor‧al /eɪˈmɒrəl, æ- $ eɪˈmɔː-, -ˈmɑː-/ adjective BAD PERSONhaving no moral standards at all OPP moral → immoral a completely amoral person —amorality /ˌeɪmɒˈræləti, ˌæ- $ ˌeɪmə-/ noun [uncountable]Examples from the Corpus
amoral• For some one who appeared so gleefully wicked and amoral, Cleo seemed surprisingly dim when it came to character judgment.• Only Humphrey Bogart, in his later years, could bring the right sort of edge to this amoral, curmudgeonly character.• an amoral, greedy businessman• Guy was greedy, amoral, obsessed with power and self-gratification.• The completely technocratic and amoral society emerges, able to manipulate anything but appreciate nothing; a desert of the mind.• His soulless eyes are narrowed and sullen, and his arch goatee recalls an amoral Transylvanian count.