Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
When's the part where virtue is its own reward?
And verily, I do not even teach that virtue is its own reward.
The bigger board still might not beckon, but then civic virtue is its own reward.
Virtue is its own reward, yes, but in a deeper sense than is often meant with that idea.
In Western terms, virtue is its own reward.
I suppose everybody has been taught from childhood that virtue is its own reward and one good turn deserves another.
It seems to illustrate Otto's failure to be recognized even when he does good, but to show that virtue is its own reward.
If he does a virtuous action, he never gets anything for it, because "Virtue is its own reward."
That means," said the prophet, "that virtue is its own reward.
Aristotle, in his book on Ethics, begins his argument by saying virtue is its own reward.
However, virtue is its own reward, so I was a barely perceptible trifle ahead in the contest.
When an 'it' owns something, it doesn't need an apostrophe: Virtue is its own reward.
Virtue is its own reward, mate -
Yudhishthira disagrees with Draupadi, and presents the theory that virtue is its own reward.
A man forgets that virtue is its own reward, and asks, What is the use of conjugal fidelity?
If patience is a virtue and virtue is its own reward, intelligence can, at times, be a bit of an albatross.
If virtue is its own reward, the producers of "The Ernest Green Story" should be richly compensated.
Virtue Is Its Own Reward (1914)
Upon the whole,' he said, reflecting and looking wise, 'it seems to me, that in the article of pulling people out of the sea, virtue is its own reward.'
And as I turned and looked at her, I realized to the full the deeper truth underlying that very wise old maxim: "Virtue is its own reward."
Although ethics teaches that : virtue is its own reward, in economics we get taught that reward is its : own virtue.
• Comics Français Comics The Comic "When will you learn, Snidely Whiplass, that virtue is its own reward?"
As Allison is carried down the hill on a stretcher, the film ends without him revealing what he had done to the guns, the implication being that virtue is its own reward.
Academic courses that try to persuade students to do the right thing morally by convincing them that they will feel better turn upside down the notion that virtue is its own reward.
In his 'Foreword', the Right Honourable Edward Schreyer wrote of his friend: "Our thanks to a decent, solid citizen democrat for whom virtue is its own reward."