English to Portuguese Dictionary conscience

conscience

consciência
definition
noun
he had a guilty conscience about his desires
an inner feeling or voice viewed as acting as a guide to the rightness or wrongness of one's behavior.
translation of 'conscience'
noun
consciência,
escrúpulo
example
he had a guilty 'conscience' about his desires
he had a guilty 'conscience' about his desires
I wouldn't have the 'conscience' to do it
He could touch if he wanted to, and he did want to, so badly, but his 'conscience' knew it was wrong.
Does God create human beings with a 'conscience' and moral reasoning powers and then leave them alone?
my 'conscience' is clear
this is a matter of 'conscience'
she voted as her 'conscience' dictated
Ben was suffering a pang of 'conscience'
Ben was suffering a pang of 'conscience'
he's suffering from a guilty 'conscience'
I have come to realise that he was born entirely without a 'conscience' or a sense of remorse.
I hope the burglar will have a 'conscience' and return these tapes, which are of no value to anybody else.
Sweden is often held up as being a model of a democratic European country with a moral 'conscience' .
And they got the status of individuals but they don't have moral 'consciences' like we do.
Individuals will be far more free to vote their 'consciences' without fearing economic harm.
There were people who had obviously suppressed their 'consciences' for the rest of their lives after their actions.
The whole legal system would collapse if even just a few lawyers begin to let their own moral 'consciences' influence their work.
The 'conscienceless' exploitation of the disadvantaged is something that every decent American should be concerned with.
One can no longer argue that human suffering is certain and preordained without being judged 'conscienceless' , even inhuman.
Our 'consciences' and sensitivities have been deadened by too much drinking, he says.
After all, you have to leave an escape route for people's 'consciences' .
To all you knuckle headed, 'conscienceless' conservatives out there, read my first post again and allow yourself to ask the obvious question.
Perhaps that is the only way the developed world can react - by digging into pockets and allowing 'consciences' to be troubled.
Maybe these little selves are the voices on our shoulders, like our 'consciences' or our morals.
Let the people vote for the president and vice president of their choice, in accordance with their 'consciences' .
Maybe that may persuade them to examine their 'consciences' .
What the townspeople really suffer from are diseased 'consciences' brought on by severe greed.
The common people, whose 'consciences' are still alert, are the wheat.
I think therefore that we in the media have to examine our 'consciences' and say we have a responsibility here beyond informing the public.
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