All 8 Uses of
obligation
in
A Good Man is Hard to Find AND OTHER STORIES
- There is no moral obligation to keep him, she was saying under her breath, there is absolutely no moral obligation.†
Story 10.
- There is no moral obligation to keep him, she was saying under her breath, there is absolutely no moral obligation.†
Story 10.
- He had said there was no legal obligation for her to keep the Displaced Person if he was not satisfactory, but then he had brought up the moral one.†
Story 10.
- She meant to tell him that her moral obligation was to her own people, to Mr. Shortley, who had fought in the world war for his country and not to Mr. Guizac who had merely arrived here to take advantage of whatever he could.†
Story 10.
- I don't have any obligation to him.†
Story 10.
- My obligation is to the people who've done something for their country, not to the ones who've just come over to take advantage of what they can get," and she began to talk rapidly, remembering all her arguments.†
Story 10.
- Guizac," she said, "I can barely meet my obligations now."†
Story 10. *
- She began to understand that she had a moral obligation to fire the Pole and that she was shirking it because she found it hard to do.†
Story 10.
Definition:
-
(obligation) a duty