Ethos  

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-'''Ethos''' ({{pronEng|ˈiːθɒs}}) is a [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] word originally meaning "accustomed place", "custom, habit", equivalent to Latin ''[[mores]]''.+# The [[character]] or [[fundamental]] [[values]] of a [[person]], [[people]], [[culture]], or [[movement]].
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 +'''Ethos''' is a [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] word originally meaning "accustomed place", "custom, habit", equivalent to Latin ''[[mores]]''.
''Ethos'' forms the root of ''ethikos'', meaning "moral, showing moral character". To the Greeks ancient and modern, the meaning is simply "the state of being", the inner source, the soul, the mind, and the original essence, that shapes and forms a person or animal. Late Latin borrowed it as ''ethicus'', the feminine of which (''ethica'', for "moral philosophy") is the origin of the modern English word ''[[ethics]]''. ''Ethos'' forms the root of ''ethikos'', meaning "moral, showing moral character". To the Greeks ancient and modern, the meaning is simply "the state of being", the inner source, the soul, the mind, and the original essence, that shapes and forms a person or animal. Late Latin borrowed it as ''ethicus'', the feminine of which (''ethica'', for "moral philosophy") is the origin of the modern English word ''[[ethics]]''.
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  1. The character or fundamental values of a person, people, culture, or movement.

Ethos is a Greek word originally meaning "accustomed place", "custom, habit", equivalent to Latin mores.

Ethos forms the root of ethikos, meaning "moral, showing moral character". To the Greeks ancient and modern, the meaning is simply "the state of being", the inner source, the soul, the mind, and the original essence, that shapes and forms a person or animal. Late Latin borrowed it as ethicus, the feminine of which (ethica, for "moral philosophy") is the origin of the modern English word ethics.



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