Dictionary Definition
loyalty
Noun
1 the quality of being loyal [ant: disloyalty]
2 feelings of allegiance
3 the act of binding yourself (intellectually or
emotionally) to a course of action; "his long commitment to public
service"; "they felt no loyalty to a losing team" [syn: commitment, allegiance, dedication]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
Translations
the state of being loyal; fidelity
- Finnish: lojaalius, uskollisuus, luotettavuus
- Italian: lealtà
- Scots: lealty
faithfulness or devotion to some person, cause
or nation
- Finnish: lojaalius, uskollisuus
- French: loyauté
- Italian: lealtà
See also
Extensive Definition
- This page is about loyalty as faithfulness to a cause. For its use in business, see loyalty business model or Loyalty Marketing. For the Angel episode, see Loyalty (Angel episode).
Loyalty is faithfulness or a devotion to a person
or cause.
Social and cultural
Loyalty evolved
as devotion for one's family, gene-group and friends. Loyalty
comes most naturally amongst small groups or tribes where the prospect of the
whole casting out the individual seems like the ultimate,
unthinkable rejection. Loyalty to tribes evolved from the
evolutionary tactic that there is a greater chance of survival and
procreation if animals form packs/tribes
In a feudal society, centered on personal
bonds of mutual obligation, accounting for precise degrees of
protection and fellowship can prove difficult. Loyalty in these
circumstances can become a matter of extremes: alternative groups
may exist, but lack of mobility will enter a personal sense of
loyalty.
The rise of states (and later nation
states) meant the harnessing of the "loyalty" concept to foster
allegiance to the sovereign or
established government of one’s country,
also personal devotion and reverence to the sovereign and royal
family.
Wars of religion and their
interminglings with wars of states have seen loyalty used in
religious senses too, involving faithful support of a chosen or
traditional set of beliefs or of sports representatives. And in
modern times marketing
has postulated loyalties to abstract concepts such as the brand. Customer churn has become the
opposite of loyalty, just as high treason once stood as the
opposite of the same idea.
Compare loyalty
card.
Loyalty is also seen in business in a variety of
ways. As governments have grown in size and scope, some people are
more loyal to a company rather than to a country. As corporation
complexity has grown, people have shifted their loyalties to
individuals rather than companies. As those individuals move
between companies, they often take other people with them. Stock
options are one method devised to keep people loyal to a
company.
Loyalty and ethics
Plato originally said
that only a man who is just can be loyal, and that loyalty is a
condition of genuine philosophy. The philosopher Josiah Royce
said it was the supreme moral good, and that one's devotion to an
object mattered more than the merits of the object itself.
Lao Tzu's take on
loyalty: "When people lost sight of the way to live Came codes of
love and honesty, Learning came, charity came, Hypocrisy took
charge; When differences weakened family ties Came benevolent
fathers and dutiful sons; And when lands were disrupted and
misgoverned Came ministers commended as loyal."
(From the Witter
Bynner translation.)
Loyalty ( American Head Charge ) It's just a
reason to deny All the limits that border On the thiniest frailties
that makes a sudden change
I'll pay my soul into sleep I'll make up words
that I keep Letting nothing go to anyone at all
Where is your loyalty now When all the cards have
been left on the table? Where is your loyalty now When all the
cards have been left on the table?
All of them Bleed at the nerves That take so long
To wear down
I'll pay my soul into sleep I'll make up words
that I keep Letting nothing go to anyone at all
Where is your loyalty now
When all the cards have been left on the table?
Where is your loyalty now When all the cards have been left on the
table?
(This time I let go) This time I have made enough
mistakes For you to bear against me in direct break Our original
ideals, you let us down And betrayed our trust with all your
promises
I see a piece of shit alive in you Cast them near
enough to be a truth
This time I have made enough mistakes For you to
bear against me in direct break Our original ideals, you let us
down And betrayed our trust with all your promises
Where is your loyalty now When all the cards have
been left on the table? Where is your loyalty now When all the
cards have been left on the table?
There were many intents to replace loyalty with
support of the ruling party, president, king or dictator.
Loyalty can be used as a tool of persuasion and
brainwashing.
The quotation below allows to avoid the
confusion:
"...all political power is inherent in the
people, and all free governments are founded on their authority and
instituted for their benefit; and that they have _at all times_ an
undeniable and indefeasible right to _alter their form of
government_ in such a manner as they may think expedient."
Under that gospel, the citizen who thinks he sees
that the commonwealth's political clothes are worn out, and yet
holds his peace and does not agitate for a new suit, is disloyal;
he is a traitor."
-- by Mark Twain, A
Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
http://mark-twain.classic-literature.co.uk/a-connecticut-yankee-in-king-arthurs-court/
Loyalty in the Bible
Jesus said, “No one can serve two masters. Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other.” (Matthew 6:24 NIV) Attempting to serve two masters leads to “double-mindedness” (James 4:8), undermining loyalty to a cause.References
loyalty in German: Loyalität
loyalty in Spanish: Lealtad
loyalty in French: Loyauté
loyalty in Dutch: Trouw (ethiek)
loyalty in Slovak: Vernosť
loyalty in Chinese: 歸屬感
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abandon, acquiescence, adherence, adhesion, allegiance, application, ardency, ardor, assiduity, assiduousness, assigned
task, attachment,
bona fides, bond, bonne
foi, bounden duty, bulldog tenacity, burden, business, call of duty,
charge, commitment, committedness, compliance, concentration, conformity, constancy, dedication, deference, dependability, devoir, devotedness, devotion, devoutness, diligence, dogged
perseverance, doggedness, duteousness, duties and
responsibilities, dutifulness, duty, earnestness, endurance, engrossment, ethics, faith, faithfulness, fealty, fervency, fervidness, fervor, fidelity, fire, firmness, firmness of mind,
fixedness, flintiness, good faith,
heartiness, heat, heatedness, homage, impassionedness,
imperative, indefatigability,
industriousness,
industry, inflexibility, insistence, insistency, intensity, intentness, line of duty,
mission, must, obedience, obediency, obligation, observance, obstinacy, onus, ought, passion, passionateness, patience, patience of Job,
patriotism, permanence, perseverance, persistence, persistency, pertinaciousness,
pertinacity,
piety, place, plodding, plugging, preoccupation, relentlessness, reliability, resolution, resolve, respect, rigidity, sedulity, sedulousness, self-imposed
duty, seriousness,
service, servility, servitium, settledness, sincerity, single-mindedness,
singleness of purpose, slogging, spirit, stability, stamina, staunchness, staying power,
steadfastness,
steadiness, steeliness,
stick-to-itiveness, stubbornness, submission, submissiveness, suit and
service, suit service, tenaciousness, tenacity, tie, tirelessness, troth, true blue, trueness, trustworthiness,
truth, unremittingness,
unswerving attention, unyieldingness, vehemence, warmth, willingness, zeal