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[ UK /fˈe‍ɪθləs/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. having the character of, or characteristic of, a traitor
    the faithless Benedict Arnold
    a lying traitorous insurrectionist

How To Use faithless In A Sentence

  • Note, Those that are faithless will be perverse; and perverseness is sin in its worst colours. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John)
  • The treatment of faithless lovers and traitorous informers in outlaw lore suggests that not all Irish images of themselves were entirely positive.
  • Roman legend claims that ravens were once as white as swans and roughly the same size, but one day a raven told Apollo that Coronis whom he passionately loved, was faithless.
  • It was gloomy, that which wrote itself on the paper, nor did it especially apply to the case in point, "but then," she reminded herself, bitterly recalling the faithlessness of Hattie, of Rosalie, of Emmy Lou Her Book and Heart
  • The despairing, faithless, gaping, horrified wife looked down at her lover, and knew that he was dead.
  • I've also stunned myself by loving a Faithless record - alright, Mass Destruction sounds like Black Steel by Tricky, but that doesn't stop it being a full-on barnstormer of a tune.
  • Some of the first written stories deal with the Sumerian Goddess Inanna making a series of sacrifices, including the sacrifice of herself and then that of her faithless lover Dumuzi, in order to attain the wisdom of the Underworld.
  • And, most important, mothers find the loves of their lives not in their faithless husbands but in their sons - and vice versa.
  • Whenever I tell people that I don't believe in one higher, diving being, they claim that I am faithless, that I don't believe in anything.
  • The ball had cut the ligature which bound his "greegree" of shells around his head, and the faithless charm lay on the ground beside him. Journal of an African Cruiser
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