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piety
[pahy-i-tee]
noun
plural
pieties- reverence for God or devout fulfillment of religious obligations. - a prayer full of piety. 
- the quality or state of being pious. - saintly piety. 
- dutiful respect or regard for parents, homeland, etc.. - filial piety. 
- a pious act, remark, belief, or the like. - the pieties and sacrifices of an austere life. 
piety
/ ˈpaɪɪtɪ /
noun
- dutiful devotion to God and observance of religious principles 
- the quality or characteristic of being pious 
- a pious action, saying, etc 
- rare, devotion and obedience to parents or superiors 
Other Word Forms
- superpiety noun
- unpiety noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of piety1
Example Sentences
I marveled at how those marks of piety remained, just an hour away from the Rooms hotel’s sleek pool deck.
To embody the idea of filial piety to appeal to the Grand Queen Dowager, Yeon creates doenjang-guk, a traditional soybean paste stew, but adds two special ingredients: spinach and clams.
Democrats will have to decide what they trust more: the judgment of last year’s voters or the self-serving pieties of Mr. Smith.
“Punch” could easily have become a bog of pieties and earnest, uplifting lessons about the necessity of forgiveness.
There was a confessional vibe at times to the conversation, borne of a fear the left can exude a piety and loftiness off-putting to many.
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