vice
1 Americannoun
-
an immoral or evil habit or practice.
These biblical verses cover the vices of boastfulness and pride, miserliness, and hypocrisy.
- Synonyms:
- depravity, wrong, wrongdoing, fault
- Antonyms:
- virtue
-
immoral conduct; depraved or degrading behavior.
In the Christian religion there are numerous instances of sudden conversions from a life of vice to one of virtue.
- Synonyms:
- corruption, corruptness, badness, wickedness, iniquity, sin, immorality
-
sexual immorality, especially prostitution.
- Synonyms:
- licentiousness, degeneracy, wantonness
-
a particular form of depravity.
-
a fault, defect, or shortcoming.
a minor vice in his literary style.
-
(of a horse’s behavior) a bad habit.
Allowing your horse turnout in a paddock may prevent vices such as weaving or wood chewing normally observed in a stall.
-
Sometimes Vice vice squad.
Detective Crockett was reassigned from the Robbery Division to Vice last year.
-
Vice, a character in the English morality plays, a personification of general vice or of a particular vice, serving as the buffoon.
-
Archaic. a physical defect, flaw, or infirmity.
In most cases, attempts to relieve the symptoms will be of little avail without at the same time relieving or removing the constitutional vice which has induced this condition.
adjective
noun
preposition
noun
-
an immoral, wicked, or evil habit, action, or trait
-
habitual or frequent indulgence in pernicious, immoral, or degrading practices
-
a specific form of pernicious conduct, esp prostitution or sexual perversion
-
a failing or imperfection in character, conduct, etc
smoking is his only vice
-
obsolete pathol any physical defect or imperfection
-
a bad trick or disposition, as of horses, dogs, etc
adjective
noun
noun
verb
noun
preposition
Related Words
See fault.
Other Word Forms
- viceless adjective
- vicelike adjective
Etymology
Origin of vice1
First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English, from Anglo-French, Old French, from Latin vitium “a fault, defect, vice”
Origin of vice3
First recorded in 1760–70; from Latin: literally, “instead of,” ablative of vicis (genitive; not attested in nominative) “recurring action, turn, interchange, alternation”
Origin of vice-4
Middle English ≪ Latin vice vice 3
Explanation
A vice is a moral failing or a bad habit. Lying and cheating are both forms of vice. In the United States, municipal police departments often have a bureau dedicated to vice, manned by vice cops, whose job it is to fight crime related to alcohol, drugs, and gambling. But anything can be a vice, as long as there's someone out there who views it as bad behavior or a moral weakness. You might say, casually, "Chocolate ice cream is my vice. I eat it every day."
Vocabulary lists containing vice
"Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare, Act II
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"Macbeth" Vocabulary from Act IV
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Words from Shakespearean Insults
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
“This is our next frontier,” said Jeremy Cooper, vice president of mountain sports development at Boyne Resorts, which runs nine resorts in North America.
From Slate • Apr. 11, 2026
“We are growing because we are telling the stories that are important to our audience,” Gemma Garcia, Telemundo’s executive vice president for news, said.
From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 11, 2026
He will be succeeded by Andy Caine, Nike vice president and creative director for sportswear, effective Sunday, the company said.
From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 10, 2026
Now the US vice president has been tasked with ending it.
From Barron's • Apr. 10, 2026
The vice president was advised to take the oath of office immediately and come to Elberon the next morning.
From "Ambushed!" by Gail Jarrow
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.