Use "betraying" in a sentence

1. Betraying (plural Betrayings) betrayal

2. This is betraying the gang.

3. Word forms: Betrays, betraying, betrayed 1

4. She managed to speak without betraying her nervousness.

5. She was accused of betraying her political ideals.

6. What does Betrayings mean? Plural form of betraying

7. Just like you, betraying your master and fellows...

8. I could never forgive Mike for betraying a confidence.

9. I never thought he would condescend to betraying his friends.

10. They could see that her body was already betraying her.

11. She recoiled from the idea of betraying her own brother.

12. For years they had been betraying state secrets to Russia.

13. For betraying the Time Council I have absolutely no regrets.

14. They've put a curse on me now, for betraying Nerina.

15. The government has been accused of betraying its election promises.

16. He has been accused of betraying his former socialist ideals.

17. He was accused of betraying his country during the war.

18. At that moment, those pieces became a symbol of betraying God.

19. 26 For years they had been betraying state secrets to Russia.

20. As a reward for betraying Robb Stark and slaughtering his family.

21. Thank you Jake for not betraying me and taking care of Demitry.

22. Didn't he feel guilty about betraying his fellow countrymen and women?

23. Or at least not note those betraying absences until far too late.

24. Why shouldn't we turn the tables by accusing a country of betraying the individual?

25. Some one he could want without feeling he was betraying all he believed in.

26. And not betraying the past, either, not rewriting our private history to suit herself.

27. I'm not the one betraying all those poor little bald-headed dying kids.

28. In betraying your fellow Kings you have broken the sacred Triumvirate of Atlantis.

29. As far as he was concerned there was no question of betraying his own comrades.

30. No one's filed a complaint against them or accused them of betraying the badge.

31. Two volumes of Bohn's edition of Lowndes's Bibliographer's Manual, the headbands betraying rough handling.

32. 7 Betraying a trust is a very quick and painful way to terminate a friendship. 

33. Fiendish Codex I: Hordes of the Abyss has her betraying Graz'zt in return for Lolth's accolades.

34. 17 Betraying a trust is a very quick and painful way to terminate a friendship. 

35. When religious people show Bigotry and intolerance, they are in fact betraying the religion they uphold.

36. Synonyms for Blurting include announcing, crying, ejaculating, exclaiming, uttering, babbling, betraying, blabbing, disclosing and divulging

37. Adultery is a personal crime, because you know precisely whom you are betraying or injuring.”

38. 1 This is madness, the ne plus ultra of American politicians betraying the American people.

39. The girl was betraying the trust that her parents had instilled into her all her young life.

40. He continued to watch as Gentle got up, his face betraying a mournful empathy with Gentle's bruising.

41. The result is that we have been steadily betraying mentally-ill people for at least a century.

42. Acts betraying one's honour can be redeemed by extended families through the often bloody reciprocity of feuds.

43. In his heart he felt he was betraying something very new and delicate, but he could not stop himself.

44. Lissa did not know where she found the strength to answer him without betraying anything of her inner turmoil.

45. Enzo negotiated a sweetheart deal favoring their employers, betraying a boat load of union members in the process.

46. Clare suddenly noticed that Elinor's hands were gripping the bedclothes, betraying the emotion hidden by her quiet words.

47. Out on the campaign trail the marketing of Mr Major has often been unimaginative, betraying Central Office inexperience.

48. That betraying look in her eyes in the cloakroom just now must have told him he'd won again.

49. Synonyms for Blurting out include exclaiming, telling, jabbering, babbling, blabbing, betraying, ejaculating, gushing, spouting and running off at the mouth

50. 11 For example, David refers to a trusted friend, one who used to eat bread with him, as betraying him.

51. Then, feeling oddly guilty, as if just thinking about another man was betraying Paul, she pushed the romantic picture away.

52. By betraying their plot Victor Amadeus displayed a precocious talent for duplicity and a cool sense of his own interests.

53. The historian was alluding, of course, to Judas Iscariot, who accepted 30 pieces of silver as the price for betraying Jesus Christ.

54. The clergy accused him of betraying the church and managed to convince the king to stop him from working on the Bible.

55. Rosamond, however, was on her side much occupied with Conjectures, though her quick imitative perception warned her against betraying them too crudely.

56. Belgravia fans are left shocked as the Trenchards' housekeeper considers betraying them - but continue to blast the 'wooden' acting and admit they're switching off to …

57. 4 : to do something that does not agree with (your beliefs, principles, etc.) He felt that he would be Betraying his principles if he accepted the money.

58. Richard Rich, he points out, has sold himself short by committing perjury and betraying his friend for such a trivial prize as the Attorney generalship of a principality

59. Aether was originally a member of Arthia prior to its destruction before betraying and leaving the Clan to get back into the original Clan of his family, Elohim

60. Betray verb [T] (NOT LOYAL) B2 to not be loyal to your country or a person, often by doing something harmful such as helping their enemies: He was accused of Betraying his country during the war.

61. The lines, "I who have stood dumb/ when your betraying sisters,/ Cauled in tar,/ wept by the railings," draw a connection between the past and the conflict in Northern Ireland contemporary to when the poem was written

62. 1858, The Rambler, page 403: As for the Bewraying, or rather betraying, of my friends, since I dare swear for their fidelity to her majesty and crown, and am assured that such my Bewraying could in no sort do my prince or country service, but

63. ‘Politicians can Betray the public interest when it comes into conflict with, and loses to, their own private interests.’ ‘So to some he is already Betraying the interests of small countries and the commission, keeper of the supranational flame, to power-grabbing Brits, Spaniards and French.’

64. 2 days ago · “Warriors of African liberation struggles quickly turned into self-Aggrandizing potentates betraying the public trust.” Palliatives were fashioned in neocolonial metropolises in their varied forms, the British Commonwealth – headed, naturally, by the Queen of England, not by King Mswati III of Swaziland, being one of such pacifiers.

65. Condescending - "having or showing a feeling of patronizing superiority." Patronizing - "apparently kind or helpful but betraying a feeling of superiority; Condescending." As noted by the above definitions, a person who is "patronizing" may be more subtle and not as open in their attitude of superiority as a person who is "Condescending".

66. ‘But that does not Betray my memory of my first husband or my love for him.’ ‘It is true that for too long I denied the sentiments that lingered in my heart in my reluctance to Betray my memory of William.’ ‘He was highly criticised for this view; some politicians even accused him of Betraying the memory of the dead Bulgarian soldiers.’

67. Performance art, often with related installations, has been one of the most significant of the hybrid art forms, variously betraying its origins in the political urgency of agitprop, the high spirits of dada cabaret, the spontaneity of the happening and, in a concern with the processes through which images and ideas acquire meaning or have their meaning eroded, in its relationship with conceptual art.