Advertisement
Advertisement
traitor
[ trey-ter ]
noun
- a person who betrays another person, a cause, or any trust.
- a person who commits treason by betraying their country.
traitor
/ ˈtreɪtə /
noun
- a person who is guilty of treason or treachery, in betraying friends, country, a cause or trust, etc
Discover More
Derived Forms
- ˈtraitorous, adjective
- ˈtraitorˌship, noun
- ˈtraitress, noun:feminine
- ˈtraitorously, adverb
Discover More
Other Words From
- traitor·ship noun
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Origin of traitor1
Discover More
Example Sentences
I asked if it was hard carrying a name like his in a land that had condemned his father as the worst kind of traitor.
A message smuggled from his jail described his son as a traitor and disowned him.
Yet today apparently that qualifies as right-wing boilerplate that would qualify Hurston as a race traitor.
To many Poles, this marked him forever as a traitor who served only his Soviet masters.
The whites would have called me a traitor, the blacks might have accused me of stealing their knowledge.
This action aroused Governor Berkeley who immediately considered Bacon a traitor, and a civil war or rebellion resulted.
But the distrust which the old traitor and apostate inspired was not to be overcome.
The price set upon the head of that “notour traitor, Mr John Welsh,” dead or alive, was 9000 merks.
Then it came across me that maybe this was one of those who fell on Owen, for one might well look for a traitor among so many.
Then the king gat his spear in both his hands, and ran toward Sir Mordred crying, Traitor, now is thy death day come.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse