self-betrayal

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of self-betrayal But when devotion is self-betrayal, what then? • When devotion is self-betrayal, the body knows. Patrycja Humienik, The New Yorker, 10 Mar. 2025 This self-betrayal reduces your ability to engage in an unself-conscious, fully authentic way. Liz Kislik, Forbes, 12 Jan. 2025 Combatting machine mindset begins with ending self-betrayal and honoring your intuition and your needs as a human being. Amanda Miller Littlejohn, Forbes, 10 Oct. 2024 And changing yourself isn’t inherently self-betrayal. Ct Jones, Rolling Stone, 9 July 2024 This can contribute to feelings of low self-worth, self-betrayal and even anxiety or depression. Sahaj Kaur Kohli, Washington Post, 28 Sep. 2023 What mattered more was always the creativity and abjection with which the contestants approached his personal challenge: Prove your loyalty through self-betrayal. Lili Loofbourow, Washington Post, 23 Mar. 2023
Recent Examples of Synonyms for self-betrayal
Noun
  • The ones who lather themselves up over causes (see Selena Gomez’s tearful direct-to-camera confession about Trump’s deportation policies, which went viral earlier this year) to signal their virtues, and often emptily or at least confused.
    Ryan Lattanzio, IndieWire, 8 June 2025
  • Bigg’s candid confession shared how deep his addiction had taken hold.
    Stephanie Giang-Paunon, FOXNews.com, 7 June 2025
Noun
  • His comments on social media were the first public acknowledgment of Israel’s backing of armed Palestinian groups within Gaza, based around powerful families.
    Julia Frankel, Los Angeles Times, 5 June 2025
  • The Justice Department grant to the BRIC had been an acknowledgment, Punch said, that healing has a role in public safety by quelling retaliatory violence.
    Bram Sable-Smith, CNN Money, 3 June 2025
Noun
  • For Minogue, the admission to the club follows on from her four recent performances at the venue as part of her global Tension Tour – bringing her final tally to 24.
    Tyler Jenke, Billboard, 9 June 2025
  • While families with financial and social capital can navigate elite admissions and cover soaring costs, others are shut out.
    Leadership Brainery, Forbes.com, 6 June 2025
Noun
  • Their jobs—which may involve stabbing, shooting, or strangling, as well as betrayals and avowals of loyalty, and locking bodies in car trunks for later disposal—may be slightly stressful at times, but the effects are temporary.
    Stephanie Zacharek, TIME, 30 July 2024
  • The finale gave us a pretty thrilling cliffhanger: an airborne dragon duel, the killing of a young prince, avowals of all-out war.
    Taylor Antrim, Vogue, 14 June 2024
Noun
  • Reliving the gut-wrenching final battle between Toothless and the giant Alpha queen dragon also hits home the importance of a simple apology as well as words of affirmation, from Stoic the Vast, specifically, who previously had not really respected his son’s way of thinking.
    Dessi Gomez, Deadline, 8 June 2025
  • Wilson saw that video on the way to the bus, and simply nodded in affirmation.
    Sabreena Merchant, New York Times, 2 June 2025
Noun
  • Only a few states have addressed the issue of whether or not to maintain a pregnant patient on supportive measures following a declaration of death.
    Katherine Drabiak, The Orlando Sentinel, 1 June 2025
  • When disaster declarations were issued for nine states in late May, some had been pending for two months and others were only partially approved.
    Seth Borenstein, Los Angeles Times, 1 June 2025
Noun
  • Financial elder abuse victims Financial elder abuse victims suffer affects to their psychological, emotional and physical well-being, such as feelings of betrayal, fear, guilt, depression and anxiety, according to the grand jury report.
    Rosalio Ahumada, Sacbee.com, 5 June 2025
  • There’s a subtle sense that taking pleasure in domesticity might be a betrayal of my values—as if nurturing children, or even enjoying something as benign as baking, plays into oppressive tropes.
    Samantha Mann, Time, 5 June 2025
Noun
  • That guilt can deepen the cycle, turning what started as self-care into self-reproach.
    Christine Michel Carter, Parents, 20 May 2025
  • Orsolya is apparently wracked with feelings of complicity, though the film, which is made up mainly of extended shots of her conversations with other people, questions the sincerity of her self-reproach against a backdrop of ethnic tension and neoliberal sprawl in Romania.
    Beatrice Loayza, New York Times, 21 Feb. 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Self-betrayal.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/self-betrayal. Accessed 13 Jun. 2025.

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