Home

Caritative

Caritative is an adjective describing things related to charity, benevolence, or the charitable works of individuals or organizations. In English, it is especially found in religious or academic discourse, where it can denote the virtue of charity or the act of giving and helping those in need. The term emphasizes the orientation of actions toward the welfare of others rather than self-interest.

Etymology and scope: the word is derived from Latin caritas meaning charity, through Old French caritatif or

Usage in theology and ethics: in theological and ethical contexts, caritative refers to the theological virtue

Cross-language note: in French, caritatif is the standard adjective for charitable; in English, caritative is relatively

See also: Charity; Caritas; Altruism; Theological virtue.

directly
into
English
as
caritative.
It
is
cognate
with
French
caritatif
and
other
Romance-language
forms,
and
it
signals
a
sense
of
benevolence
that
can
be
formal,
moral,
or
institutional
rather
than
merely
practical.
of
charity
(caritas)
and
to
charitable
acts
inspired
by
that
virtue.
It
can
describe
charitable
organizations
or
activities
as
caritative
foundations
or
efforts
in
some
academic
or
ecclesiastical
writings,
though
in
ordinary
English
the
more
common
terms
are
charitable
or
philanthropic.
rare
and
mostly
confined
to
specialized
discourse,
with
charitable
or
philanthropic
used
more
broadly
in
everyday
language.