she lost her virtue in the city.
there are many published accounts of this incident, one version may have the virtue if being true
Kindness is a virtue.By virtue of his accomplishments, he was appointed the new council leader.Virtue does not come from wealth, but wealth and every other good thing comes from virtue.(paraphrasing Socrates)
Virtues is a noun.
Honesty is a key virtue in building trust and fostering strong relationships.
"Goodness" is a synonym of virtue.
A number of claims have been made on behalf of virtue epistemology.
Experience is the knowledge by virtue of committed mistakes.
The virtue of that woman was something that will always be admired.
Technically, you can't, by virtue of the fact that "esteblish" is not a word. Perhaps "establish" is what you meant.
You can say something like "...by virtue of the fact that.." For example: "I know the mechanics of a sentence by virtue of the fact that I am an English teacher." By adding the letter "s" you are defining virtues as "the good thing about," so you can discuss the virtues of skim milk, inter alia.
I think it's more correct to say "Is gratitude a vanishing virtue?" or "Does gratitude seem to be a vanishing virtue?"
The girl in my class was a virtue in a moral excellence in a particular class such as math.
That sentence is not correct. If you want to keep it as a question as to whether gratitide is less common then it should be "Does gratitude seem to be a vanishing virute?" or if it is meant as a statement the it is "Gratitude is a vanishing virtue."
She was a paragon of virtue.
civic vertue
The sentence should be punctuated as: Patience - it's a virtue not often seen on the freeway at 5:15 pm.
Chastity is a virtue but it's not a necessity for decent life.