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Webster 1913 Edition


Perfidy

Per′fi-dy

(pẽr′fĭ-dy̆)
,
Noun.
;
pl.
Perfidies
(pẽr′fĭ-dĭz)
.
[L.
perfidia
, fr. L.
perfidus
faithless;
per
(cf. Skr.
parā
away) +
fides
faith: cf. F.
perfidie
. See
Faith
.]
The act of violating faith or allegiance; violation of a promise or vow, or of trust reposed; faithlessness; treachery.
The ambition and
perfidy
of tyrants.
Macaulay.
His
perfidy
to this sacred engagement.
DeQuincey.

Webster 1828 Edition


Perfidy

PER'FIDY

,
Noun.
[L. perfidia; per and fides, faith.] The act of violating faith, a promise, vow or allegiance; treachery; the violation of a trust reposed. Perfidy is not applied to violations of contracts in ordinary pecuniary transactions, but to violations of faith or trust in friendship, in agency and office, in allegiance, in connubial engagements, and in the transactions of kings.

Definition 2024


perfidy

perfidy

English

Noun

perfidy (plural perfidies)

  1. A state or act of violating faith or allegiance; violation of a promise or vow, or of trust reposed; faithlessness; treachery.
  2. (law) Specifically, in warfare, an illegitimate act of deception, such as using symbols like the Red Cross or white flag to gain proximity to an enemy for purposes of attack.
    • 1921, Lassa Oppenheim; Ronald Francis Roxburgh, International law: a treatise‎, page 229:
      Stratagems must be carefully distinguished strategy from perfidy, since the former are allowed, whereas the latter is prohibited.
    • 1993, Leslie C. Green, The contemporary law of armed conflict‎, page 89:
      Abuse of a protective emblem amounts to perfidy and constitutes a war crime under the customary law of armed conflict.
    • 2008, Sidney Axinn, A Moral Military‎, page 84:
      Ruses of war are legitimate so long as they do not involve treachery or perfidy on the part of the belligerent resorting to them.
  3. A state or act of deceit.
    • 1962, Barbara Wertheim Tuchman, The Guns of August‎, page 154:
      Germans could not get over the perfidy of it. It was unbelievable that the English, having degenerated to the stage where suffragettes heckled the Prime Minister and defied the police, were going to fight.
    • 2000 July 17, “Honda becomes chain letter victim”, in eWeek:
      Honda Motor Co. is the latest victim of e-mail perfidy, which started when a phony chain letter promised that the automaker would give away free cars.
    • 2008 October 16, “McCain expected to make amends on Letterman show”, in Los Angeles Times:
      Letterman roared about the perfidy of lying politicos.

Quotations

  • For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:perfidy.

Synonyms

Related terms

Translations