Dictionary
disloyal
adjective
Not loyal, unloyal, without loyalty; faithless, traitorous.
synonyms
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The word "disloyal" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe someone who is unfaithful or puts their own interests or desires before those of a group they belong to. Example sentence: John proved to be disloyal to his team, choosing not to help them complete the project.
Exact(60)
Anwar sued the New Straits Times Press, claiming that a 2002 article examining his ties to a US thinktank made him seem like an "American agent" who was unprincipled and disloyal to Malaysia.
Or a bully, a disloyal lover, a murderer?
I will, in due course, close my current account and open one with Santander, thus earning interest as well as ridding myself of such an "impersonal", disloyal and rude organisation.
Its politicians occasionally come up with some odd statements, are sometimes disloyal to allies, sometimes rubbishing the politics of human rights (which under Havel passingly gave the country some sense of identity), and recently tried somewhat bizarrely to befriend China.
Perhaps they feel it would be disloyal to their children or think, as I also do, that the blessing of a child outweighs the tough stuff.
The betting this week was on which of his own notoriously disloyal colleagues the prime minister would jettison in order to make way for half-a-dozen Labour people around the cabinet table.
(This difference of view has deep roots: several southern European languages talk of "disloyal" competition when English uses the term "unfair").In other debt-ridden Western countries, including much of the euro zone, vested interests and tribal voter blocks are hunkering down to resist reforms and defend dwindling privileges.
He too often relies "on the logic of a law professor rather than the passion of a leader".Washington commentators have called Mr Panetta disloyal.
Their footnotes signpost all the major events of the great war and provide the reader with some delicious quotes.Like the best diarists, Margot is loose-lipped: Americans are dim, the French are disloyal, Germans are "great, coarse, savage brutes".
The implication was that disloyal MPs should be punished by their constituency parties.Mr Duncan Smith deserves some sympathy.
Conscripts typically serve far from their hometowns, and the army is believed to have culled potentially disloyal soldiers from active units.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com