allegiance
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++al·le·giance /əˈliːdʒəns/ ●○○ noun [countable, uncountable] FAITHFULloyalty to a leader, country, belief etc 〔对领袖、国家、信念等的〕忠诚,效忠allegiance to You owe allegiance (=have a duty to give allegiance) to your king. 你必须效忠国王。swear/pledge allegiance I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. 我向美国国旗宣誓效忠。 an oath of allegiance 效忠宣誓switch/transfer allegiance (=start to support a different person, group etc) 改变拥戴对象 The people here have strong political allegiances. 这里的民众政治忠诚度很高。
Examples from the Corpus
allegiance• It was difficult on everybody and there was an allegiance to Jef, but Steve had his own compelling aura.• These might include songs, chants, or activities that express allegiance to political leaders or symbols.• Female cuckoos bear more allegiance to a particular host, be it redstart or warbler, than do their males.• Offices may have been relocated, but not allegiances.• New ruling administrators owed allegiance to the state.• A number of communes were independent of any seigneur, and owed allegiance to the Crown alone.• Opposition leaders have proclaimed their allegiance to the new government.• Their allegiance is still to the Queen.political allegiances• These contrasting values and political allegiances demonstrate the lack of any necessary correspondence between elite methodology, state theory and political values.• The quotations above illustrate this left-wing frankness, and show how far political allegiances in some cases determine selection policy.• The Independent has remained independent from political allegiances though it too favoured a middle-of-the-road political outcome in the 1987 election.• The political allegiances of the Highland clans present a complex picture.Origin allegiance (1300-1400) Old French ligeance, from lige “person you owe loyal service to”, from Late Latin laetus “serf”al·le·giance nounChineseSyllable
to belief leader, country, a etc Corpus loyalty
allegiance
al‧le‧giance /əˈliːdʒəns/
noun [uncountable and countable]
allegiance to
You owe allegiance (=have a duty to give allegiance) to your king.
swear/pledge allegiance
I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America.
an oath of allegiance
switch/transfer allegiance (=start to support a different person, group etc)
The people here have strong political allegiances.
al‧le‧giance /əˈliːdʒəns/
noun [uncountable and countable] Date: 1300-1400
Language: Old French
Origin: ligeance, from lige 'person you owe loyal service to', from Late Latin laetus 'serf'
loyalty to a leader, country, belief etcLanguage: Old French
Origin: ligeance, from lige 'person you owe loyal service to', from Late Latin laetus 'serf'
allegiance to
swear/pledge allegiance
switch/transfer allegiance (=start to support a different person, group etc)