Entitlement in a sentence as a noun

It came out wrong and definitely was not intended to imply entitlement on anyone's behalf.

Supplying people with free snackies and flexible hours without giving them freedom won't make them work harder, it'll just give them a sense of entitlement.

If you are not enjoyable to interact with people won't be your friend because friendship isn't an entitlement: it's a collaborative project.

Here's a guy who was doing more than the company policy just to be nice, and everyone turns into complainypants over their perceived entitlement.

The degree of entitlement among new grads in the software development industry is incredible.

What is entitlement is employers pushing down pay rates by paying on salary while pressuring for extra hours without overtime.

I don't love the article's tone, but I do like the implicit point that Gen Y's sense of entitlement about success is not so different from older generations' sense of entitlement about pensions.

The fundamentalist missionaries infected them with the peculiar sort of madness, entitlement, laziness and corruption that comes with that belief system.

Also, whiners who neither helped then and aren't stepping up to help now reek of entitlement: what right do they enjoy to Pollack's continued donation of time and money, just because he historically provided something the community liked?

Entitlement definitions

noun

right granted by law or contract (especially a right to benefits); "entitlements make up the major part of the federal budget"