by+virtue+of
71virtue — [13] Latin virtūs ‘bravery, strength, capacity, skill, merit’ was derived from vir ‘man’ (source also of English virago ‘manlike woman’ [14] and virile [15]), and so etymologically it denoted ‘manliness’. It passed into English via Old French… …
72virtue — sb. RG. 86 …
73virtue — vir·tue || vÉœrtjuË / vÉœË n. goodness; uprightness, integrity; morality (especially in sexual conduct); good quality …
74virtue claim — ideological request …
75virtue is its own reward — a good deed provides its own reward, satisfaction from doing a good deed is the reward …
76virtue is its own reward — The knowledge that you have done the right thing, or that you have acted in a moral way, is sufficient reward and you should not expect more …
77virtue — godnes …
78virtue — n. 1. Force, efficacy, power, strength, potency, energy, inherent power. 2. Natural excellence, worth, merit, value, desert. 3. Goodness (that comes from self discipline), uprightness, probity, integrity, rectitude, morality, worth, moral… …
79virtue — vir·tue …
80virtue — Добродетель …