From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishrectituderec‧ti‧tude /ˈrektɪtjuːd $ -tuːd/ noun [uncountable] formal HONESTbehaviour that is honest and morally correct
Examples from the Corpus
rectitude• Most of them led lives of exemplary moral rectitude.• There was a moral tone to the school, an assumption of rectitude and honor I swallowed from the very start.• Lord Halifax was a cold fish, a man of steely rectitude, a religious man.• Such rectitude, however, was very much the exception rather than the rule among the great powers.• Adelina feels offended that her husband would doubt her loyalty knowing the depth of her love and the rectitude of her character.• My father and I were visiting the family of a stern judge who was renowned for his unflinching rectitude and respectability.Origin rectitude (1400-1500) French Late Latin rectitudo, from Latin rectus; → RECTIFY