Insubordinate in a sentence as an adjective

To do it, you have to learn how to be insubordinate enough to keep your creativity, without getting fired.

They might assume I'm a liar and treat me as though I'm being insubordinate I really hope Congress does somethings fast.

"Dishonest" is not as accurate as "insubordinate" when including all murderers who break the law in with someone who blocks traffic to protest civil rights injustice.

The reason I had to start some company was because I am rather insubordinate, and lack consistency of attendance and effort on things that I am less than passionately attached to.

I want the people who had enough of an insubordinate/rebellious streak to protect their creativity and curiosity through their 20s, despite their corporate masters' attempts to destroy it.

No, I'm not constitutionally insubordinate-- I follow rules that make sense, like traffic laws-- but I refuse to be in the abusive power dynamic that sometimes comes with a payment relationship.

He's right that people need to be more flexible regarding what to be passionate about, but for a lot of jobs, there just is no way to become passionate without also becoming unemployable and insubordinate.

I'm insubordinate, arrogant, brash, outspoken and highly opinionated.

It's interesting to think of an insubordinate dev being tasked to write some horrible locked-down system in Rust and going, "yeah, this thing has to be in an unsafe block because xyz, oh, woops, I guess I introduced a jailbreak opportunity".

If you go against an organizational culture of staying late, your coworkers will likely resent you, your boss will think you are lazy or insubordinate, and you are probably going to be the proverbial nail that sticks out and gets hammered down.

Furthermore we intentionally designed this for easy collaboration / talking and your wearing headphones is a directly insubordinate act against our intentional management decision to encourage collaboration.

Insubordinate definitions

adjective

not submissive to authority; "a history of insubordinate behavior"; "insubordinate boys"

adjective

disposed to or engaged in defiance of established authority

See also: resistant resistive