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16 Sentences With "disloyally"

How to use disloyally in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "disloyally" and check conjugation/comparative form for "disloyally". Mastering all the usages of "disloyally" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In a disciplinary review of Michael Lauber's work, the oversight agency also concluded that Lauber acted disloyally and had tried to block the watchdog's investigation.
Many Spaniards no doubt share the anger of King Felipe who, in a rare televised speech, denounced Catalonia's leaders for irresponsibly and disloyally tearing up the constitution of 1978.
That, of course, is enormously troubling -- almost as troubling as hearing Trump, a major presidential candidate, disloyally tiptoe toward treason by calling on a U.S. foe to spy in America.
In one eye-popping detail, Waymo said Mr. Levandowski had acted disloyally even though it had paid him $120 million in bonus incentives for his work on the autonomous vehicle project.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to consider whether federal labor law prohibits employers from firing a worker who acted disloyally but did not intend to harm his or her employer's business.
Over the centuries, the distinctive feature of Jew-hatred has been its flexibility in changing its shape and mounting varied, mutually contradictory attacks: Anti-Semites can accuse Jews of being simultaneously capitalists and communists, plutocrats and beggars, or disloyally internationalist while narrowly clannish.
"For instance, the loyalty message argued that Trump 'has repeatedly behaved disloyally towards our country to serve his own interests' and that 'during the Vietnam War, he dodged the draft to follow his father into the development business,'" Feinberg and his co-author write in the study.
Moreover, elements of his speech—a new carbon-tax on the EU's frontiers, a proposal to tax foreign tech firms where they make money rather than where they are registered, a crusade against "social dumping" with harmonised corporate tax rates—were in keeping with long-standing French attempts to stop member states competing "disloyally" against each other.
Newman 1941, 85–95. He had learned that a Parisian faction intended to disrupt the production, and disloyally went through with it presenting himself as the unlucky artist involved in a work unworthy of his powers. The performances were utterly disrupted, and Niemann remained disingenuously aloof from Wagner's artistic claims throughout.Newman 1941, 108–123.
Doulton announced his candidacy but a rumour started to circulate that he had bribed Williams to stand down. Williams now decided to stand to preserve his reputation and Roupell, somewhat disloyally, backed him. Doulton now withdrew but seems to have made light of the matter.Harris (2001) p.52 In 1862, Roupell was consumed by the scandal that gave rise to the Roupell case and resigned as MP on 4 February.
So the two fled together. Then, after the overthrow of the Shang dynasty to which they had then pledged loyalty (and which theoretically owned the land and its produce by divine right), the two brothers faced the dilemma of disloyally eating the food of the new (in their opinion, usurping) dynasty or remaining loyal in spirit to the former dynasty, and so the two were left only with starvation.
However, the competition made it impossible for either airline to make a profit on the route. The Cimber Air case ended in arbitration and on 27 October 1994 the Maritime and Commercial Court found that Cimber Air had acted disloyally and sentenced them to pay Maersk Air a compensation of DKK 35.5 million.Ellemose: 106 Maersk took delivery of its first Boeing 737-300 in 1985. Half of Maersk Air's accumulative profits came from the sale of used aircraft.
But the monarch ignored the advice of Atan Burhagohain, and dispatched Ghorakonwar Borbarua against the Dafalas at the head of a considerable force. In May 1672 CE, the Borbarua crossed the Subansiri River and halted at Rangamati from where he shifted his camp to Dulungmukh. Two Assamese officers, Tua and Tita were dispatched to bring the Dafalas to submission. The agents of Dafala chief Bakara Gam met Tua and Tita and expressed regrets for having acted disloyally against the Ahom monarch.
Esquieu de Floyran (Floyrac or Foyrac) was a prior of Montfaucon in the Abbey of Saint Martial in Limoges. Native from Béziers, he spoke falsely and disloyally against the order of the Temple, and so became a traitor with Guillaume Robert, Bernard Pelet and Gérard de Boyzol. He then was imprisoned. In 1308 he wrote a letter to the king of Aragon James II reminding him that when he visited him in Lerida in early 1305 he had given information about the order.
On January 30, supported by thousands of his soldiers who made a (likely orchestrated) commotion, Guo Wei agreed to ascend the throne, and immediately general Guo Chongwei was sent with 700 cavalries to intercept Liu Yun, who had by then arrived in Song Prefecture. When Guo Chongwei came to Song Prefecture, he first met with Feng Dao outside the city gate before venturing inside to meet with Liu Yun. Realizing this is a conspiracy, the 22-year-old Guo Zhongshu angrily lambasted the 69-year-old Feng Dao, who had disloyally held high positions under the Later Tang, Later Jin, and the Liao dynasty before Later Han: Feng Dao was too ashamed to respond. Guo Zhongshu and others then advised Liu Yun to immediately kill Feng Dao, gather the troops in Song Prefecture and flee to Hedong Circuit where Liu Yun's father Liu Chong was stationed as the military governor.
He was accused of speaking "disloyally" when he allegedly belittled the threat of Germany to the security of the United States. In June 1918, the Socialist Party figure Eugene V. Debs of Indiana was arrested for violating the Sedition Act by undermining the government's conscription efforts. He was sentenced to ten years in prison. He served his sentence in the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary from April 13, 1919, until December 1921, when President Harding commuted Debs' sentence to time served, effective on December 25, Christmas Day.New York Times: "Harding Frees Debs and 23 Others Held for War Violations," December 24, 1921, accessed January 4, 2011 In March 1919, President Wilson, at the suggestion of Attorney General Thomas Watt Gregory, released or reduced the sentences of some two hundred prisoners convicted under the Espionage Act or the Sedition Act.Stone, 231-2 With the act rendered inoperative by the end of hostilities, Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer waged a public campaign, not unrelated to his own campaign for the Democratic nomination for president, in favor of a peacetime version of the Sedition Act.

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