- (intransitive)
to make moral pronouncements  - (transitive)
to interpret or explain in a moral sense  - (transitive)
to improve the morals of  
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025
mor•al•ize /ˈmɔrəˌlaɪz, ˈmɑr-/USA pronunciation  
v. [no object], -ized, -iz•ing. 
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025- to express opinions about matters of right and wrong, esp. in a tiresome way or when intolerant of other's views:moralizing about what TV shows our children should watch.
 
mor•al•ize 
(môr′ə līz′, mor′-),USA pronunciation v., -ized, -iz•ing. 
v.i.
v.t.
 mor′al•i•za′tion, n. 
mor′al•iz′er, n.
mor′al•iz′ing•ly, adv.
v.i.
- to reflect on or express opinions about something in terms of right and wrong, esp. in a self-righteous or tiresome way.
 
v.t.
- to explain in a moral sense, or draw a moral from.
 - to improve the morals of.
 
- Medieval Latin mōrālizāre. See moral, -ize
 - Middle English moralisen 1350–1400
 
mor′al•iz′er, n.
mor′al•iz′ing•ly, adv.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
'moralize' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):