allegiance
Genuine and sincere loyalty.
Indicates complete and total loyalty.
Indicates a powerful sense of loyalty.
Loyalty to a political party or ideology.
Unquestioning loyalty, often with negative connotations.
Loyalty to one's country.
Loyalty to a political party.
Loyalty to a religion or faith.
Loyalties that change or are unstable.
The main or most important loyalty.
Loyalty based on long-standing customs or beliefs.
Loyalty to one's social class.
A formal promise of loyalty, famously recited by schoolchildren in the US.
A formal and solemn promise of loyalty, often made in a legal or official context.
Used to specify the person, group, or country to which loyalty is directed.
To make a formal promise of loyalty.
To make a solemn promise or oath of loyalty.
To state one's loyalty publicly.
To offer or commit one's loyalty to someone or something.
To alter one's loyalty from one group or person to another.
To have a duty or obligation of loyalty.
To change one's loyalty, often decisively, to an opposing side.
To alter one's loyalty, often gradually, from one group to another.
To formally move one's loyalty from one entity to another.
Used when a leader or institution demands loyalty from people.
Used when a group or idea asserts its right to someone's loyalty.
To demonstrate one's loyalty through actions.
To have authority that naturally makes people loyal.
To keep or maintain the loyalty of people or followers.
To stop being loyal to someone or something.
To have an internal sense or feeling of loyalty.
To claim or declare one's loyalty, sometimes insincerely.