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[ UK /lˈɔ‍ɪə‍lti/ ]
[ US /ˈɫɔɪəɫti/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of binding yourself (intellectually or emotionally) to a course of action
    they felt no loyalty to a losing team
    his long commitment to public service
  2. feelings of allegiance
  3. the quality of being loyal

How To Use loyalty In A Sentence

  • Austria felt a great deal of loyalty to him and was ready to hand him the victory to prevent Germany from eliminating him.
  • You would commit the most foul of murders out of loyalty to me.
  • To Lucien, loyalty to France is non-negotiable.
  • Day after day thousands of people die of confessing their loyalty to the Tokugawa shogunate.
  • In some quarters the touching belief that financial services companies will reward loyalty persists. Times, Sunday Times
  • Its political culture, once fiercely democratic, is being eroded by a manipulated, bureaucratic legalism that identifies dissent as disloyalty.
  • Of course, all returning players are comped for their loyalty in the rewards program where they earn 1 point for every $10 wagered.
  • That, and his extraordinary capacity for self-sacrificing friendship, loyalty and sweet-natured nannying, have been his quadruple of acclaimed lifetime's high-lights.
  • Each new exhibition of the irrevocableness of the break between Jesus and the leaders was a severe test of their loyalty. The Life of Jesus of Nazareth
  • She inspires great loyalty among her followers.
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