Allegiance in a sentence as a noun

I don't even want to visit the US again, let alone pledge my allegiance to it.

The whole idea of a "pledge of allegiance" strikes me as extremely creepy.

As time goes on, my bafflement at our collective need to swear allegiance to our tools is turning into bewilderment.

Do we want this power to exist, or not?You know for me, the reason I'm upset is that I grew up in school saying the pledge of allegiance.

Better to say "an Anonymous" or "a hacker claiming allegiance with Anonymous".Of course, this is how the media is being hacked.

I wouldn't call it FUD. Ubuntu's terrible initial state as well as principles are completely valid reasons to drop allegiance to a free operating system.

They feed you intellectual manure and try to appeal to your monkey brain to accept them as your tribal leaders and unconditionally pledge your allegiance to them and their purposes.

Which is to say, plenty of people with no particular allegiance to Apple have been unhappy with Flash for a long time, so there is no need to paint this as some kind of unilateral war on Apple's part.

Your identity has been subsumed, and to prove it I'd like to point out that your livelihood is now in a great part dependent on your allegiance to my completely undefined and arbitrary value system.

A political culture defined not by fundamental ideological allegiance and difference, but by special pleading.

Seeking to carve out a piece of the galaxy for its own, a large portion of Test broke away from the accord to form HoneyBadgers, an independently operating group still pledging allegiance to Test but not to GoonSwarm.

Allegiance definitions

noun

the act of binding yourself (intellectually or emotionally) to a course of action; "his long commitment to public service"; "they felt no loyalty to a losing team"

See also: commitment loyalty dedication

noun

the loyalty that citizens owe to their country (or subjects to their sovereign)

See also: fealty