[
UK
/fˈeɪθləsnəs/
]
NOUN
- unfaithfulness by virtue of being unreliable or treacherous
How To Use faithlessness In A Sentence
- And the diseases of conceit are a familiar notion from the biblical tradition that goes along with its partner diseases of hubris, idolatry and faithlessness.
- But Amanda, though bitterly resenting her husband's faithlessness, remains firm in her virtue.
- There is, there can be nothing endearing about faithlessness.
- 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
- But to fail as Jeffrey Harrison does, so unambitiously, so droopily, to leave the plate with three called strikes-it smacks of faithlessness, of a kind of shrugging perfidy, a knowledge of what's expected.
- And the more he yearned to be gone the more bitterly he blamed himself for what he called his ingratitude and faithlessness. In Orchard Glen
- [54] 'In his own mode of acting,' must be understood here of his honourable mode of acting; though there are also _malae artes_, such as faithlessness, cunning, flattery, and the like. C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino
- Not a word spake he for a full minute, but he drew his breath hard, flinging out at length a bitter sarcasm on the faithlessness of women, and bidding Raphael trust not too much to their promises, he abruptly left us. Romance of Roman Villas (The Renaissance)
- But its faithlessness manifests itself in another way also: it continually becomes only a repetition. Archive 2009-04-01
- The letter stated that her involvement in the resolution ‘demonstrated faithlessness in and disloyalty to the University and exhibited an unwillingness to work for the common good of the University.’