Insubordination in a sentence as a noun

And it will be easier to get your next job if you haven't been fired from your previous job for insubordination.

The senior folks and leaders will ***** about it, but not to the point of getting themselves fired for insubordination.

Where's the line between "a troublemaker" and "insubordination"?

Told it would be "insubordination" not to sign this "official version of events", even though it was full of factual inaccuracies.

The incident was described as a "disgraceful act of insubordination.

Firstly, the church is not a corporation where processes and orders dictate the behaviour of employees and people are fired for insubordination.

The manager, for whatever reason, forwarded the email to the technical leader's manager, and that technical leader was then terminated the next morning for "insubordination.

It is the result of the changing message of mass media, celebrity icons, and social trends-from one that rewards integrity, and hard work to one that glorifies violence, 'thug' culture, and insubordination.

Additionally this Marine was told by superior officers previously to not engage in such activity and did so anyway, yet you think none of this constitutes insubordination?

Finally we occasionally escort outside visitors past this area on sales calls and what would they think if they saw you wearing headphones, that we are not observant, or we tolerate insubordination, or ?This is a paraphrase of the conversation I had at a former employer.

It turns out that avoiding those frivolous lawsuits requires concrete and specific evidence of incompetence, insubordination, misappropriation of company resources, etc. We're talking actual emails, not remembered hallway conversations.

"The Arstechnica article says "Several of those individuals are apparently now ex-Conservapedia members, having had their accounts blocked for insubordination," implying Conservopedia is overstepping its guidelines.

The First Amendment did not protect speech encouraging insubordination, because, "when a nation is at war, many things that might be said in time of peace are such a hindrance to its effort that their utterance will not be endured so long as men fight, and that no Court could regard them as protected by any constitutional right.

Insubordination definitions

noun

defiance of authority

noun

an insubordinate act

See also: rebelliousness