Is there a single word that means “To commit treason”?











up vote
4
down vote

favorite












Is there a word I can use in place of 'committing treason' in the sentence




"The corporal was on trial for committing treason."




so the sentence reads




"The corporal was on trial for _____ing"











share|improve this question


















  • 2




    Welcome to SE! Thank you for including a sample sentence. What research have you done? What words have you tried and rejected?
    – miltonaut
    Dec 1 at 18:29










  • You can try using a synonym such as "mutiny", "revolt", "rebel", but there's probably nothing that carries the precise same legal implications.
    – Hot Licks
    Dec 1 at 18:35






  • 4




    Any normal person would simply use the noun treason in your context (committing is completely redundant). If you're determined to use an alternative, and you don't mind sounding pretentious, consider treasonry (obsolete, rare, according to the full OED).
    – FumbleFingers
    Dec 1 at 18:36

















up vote
4
down vote

favorite












Is there a word I can use in place of 'committing treason' in the sentence




"The corporal was on trial for committing treason."




so the sentence reads




"The corporal was on trial for _____ing"











share|improve this question


















  • 2




    Welcome to SE! Thank you for including a sample sentence. What research have you done? What words have you tried and rejected?
    – miltonaut
    Dec 1 at 18:29










  • You can try using a synonym such as "mutiny", "revolt", "rebel", but there's probably nothing that carries the precise same legal implications.
    – Hot Licks
    Dec 1 at 18:35






  • 4




    Any normal person would simply use the noun treason in your context (committing is completely redundant). If you're determined to use an alternative, and you don't mind sounding pretentious, consider treasonry (obsolete, rare, according to the full OED).
    – FumbleFingers
    Dec 1 at 18:36















up vote
4
down vote

favorite









up vote
4
down vote

favorite











Is there a word I can use in place of 'committing treason' in the sentence




"The corporal was on trial for committing treason."




so the sentence reads




"The corporal was on trial for _____ing"











share|improve this question













Is there a word I can use in place of 'committing treason' in the sentence




"The corporal was on trial for committing treason."




so the sentence reads




"The corporal was on trial for _____ing"








single-word-requests






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 1 at 18:25









user62350

283




283








  • 2




    Welcome to SE! Thank you for including a sample sentence. What research have you done? What words have you tried and rejected?
    – miltonaut
    Dec 1 at 18:29










  • You can try using a synonym such as "mutiny", "revolt", "rebel", but there's probably nothing that carries the precise same legal implications.
    – Hot Licks
    Dec 1 at 18:35






  • 4




    Any normal person would simply use the noun treason in your context (committing is completely redundant). If you're determined to use an alternative, and you don't mind sounding pretentious, consider treasonry (obsolete, rare, according to the full OED).
    – FumbleFingers
    Dec 1 at 18:36
















  • 2




    Welcome to SE! Thank you for including a sample sentence. What research have you done? What words have you tried and rejected?
    – miltonaut
    Dec 1 at 18:29










  • You can try using a synonym such as "mutiny", "revolt", "rebel", but there's probably nothing that carries the precise same legal implications.
    – Hot Licks
    Dec 1 at 18:35






  • 4




    Any normal person would simply use the noun treason in your context (committing is completely redundant). If you're determined to use an alternative, and you don't mind sounding pretentious, consider treasonry (obsolete, rare, according to the full OED).
    – FumbleFingers
    Dec 1 at 18:36










2




2




Welcome to SE! Thank you for including a sample sentence. What research have you done? What words have you tried and rejected?
– miltonaut
Dec 1 at 18:29




Welcome to SE! Thank you for including a sample sentence. What research have you done? What words have you tried and rejected?
– miltonaut
Dec 1 at 18:29












You can try using a synonym such as "mutiny", "revolt", "rebel", but there's probably nothing that carries the precise same legal implications.
– Hot Licks
Dec 1 at 18:35




You can try using a synonym such as "mutiny", "revolt", "rebel", but there's probably nothing that carries the precise same legal implications.
– Hot Licks
Dec 1 at 18:35




4




4




Any normal person would simply use the noun treason in your context (committing is completely redundant). If you're determined to use an alternative, and you don't mind sounding pretentious, consider treasonry (obsolete, rare, according to the full OED).
– FumbleFingers
Dec 1 at 18:36






Any normal person would simply use the noun treason in your context (committing is completely redundant). If you're determined to use an alternative, and you don't mind sounding pretentious, consider treasonry (obsolete, rare, according to the full OED).
– FumbleFingers
Dec 1 at 18:36












3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote



accepted










Treason is a defined legal concept, so has a definite meaning. There's no verb form of treason. Use




The corporal was on trial for treason.







share|improve this answer

















  • 6




    "Defined legal concept" doesn't entail "there's no verb form," unless you can explain why.
    – Azor Ahai
    Dec 1 at 20:44












  • @AzorAhai I don't think he was making an implication, just stating independent facts.
    – Barmar
    Dec 4 at 8:05


















up vote
2
down vote













The verb is the same as the noun - 'treason'. But the verb form is stated by the OED to be 'rare'.




13.. K. Alis. 723 Thy fadir hastow tresond here!
c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 105 Þei wer fulle wele knowen, þat wild haf tresond him.
c1374 Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde iv. 410 (438) To traysen [v.r. trassen] a wight þat trewe is vn-to me.
1890 L. Lewis Proving of Gennad xv. 104 Ere morning, thou shalt know who treasons thee.
(Hide quotations)







share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    -2
    down vote













    No verb springs to mind, but the sentiment is captured by treachery.




    treachery noun



    1 : violation of allegiance or of faith and confidence : treason



    2 : an act of perfidy or treason




    • Marriam-Webster




    So the sentence would read: "The corporal was on trial for treachery".



    Note: As others have pointed out, certain words have different and specific meanings in law, so it depends whether you are describing the actual crime they are being tried for, or simply a general statement about its nature.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Treachery describes behavior or character. Treason is a criminal offense. No one is on trial for treachery.
      – michael.hor257k
      Dec 1 at 21:32










    • It is quite literally an act of treason. Much as one could be on trial for blowing up a house, and charged with arson, one may on trial for treachery and charged with treason.
      – Freddie R
      Dec 1 at 21:34












    • I don't think anyone would say "The corporal was on trial for killing."
      – michael.hor257k
      Dec 1 at 21:42










    • One could say "The corporal was on trial for killing his commanding officer", but since "treachery" doesn't really have the same construction so it is fine to leave as is.
      – Freddie R
      Dec 1 at 22:06






    • 1




      But OP asks for a verb, while treachery is a noun. If OP wanted to use a noun they could just use treason.
      – The Photon
      Dec 2 at 1:29











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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    3
    down vote



    accepted










    Treason is a defined legal concept, so has a definite meaning. There's no verb form of treason. Use




    The corporal was on trial for treason.







    share|improve this answer

















    • 6




      "Defined legal concept" doesn't entail "there's no verb form," unless you can explain why.
      – Azor Ahai
      Dec 1 at 20:44












    • @AzorAhai I don't think he was making an implication, just stating independent facts.
      – Barmar
      Dec 4 at 8:05















    up vote
    3
    down vote



    accepted










    Treason is a defined legal concept, so has a definite meaning. There's no verb form of treason. Use




    The corporal was on trial for treason.







    share|improve this answer

















    • 6




      "Defined legal concept" doesn't entail "there's no verb form," unless you can explain why.
      – Azor Ahai
      Dec 1 at 20:44












    • @AzorAhai I don't think he was making an implication, just stating independent facts.
      – Barmar
      Dec 4 at 8:05













    up vote
    3
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    3
    down vote



    accepted






    Treason is a defined legal concept, so has a definite meaning. There's no verb form of treason. Use




    The corporal was on trial for treason.







    share|improve this answer












    Treason is a defined legal concept, so has a definite meaning. There's no verb form of treason. Use




    The corporal was on trial for treason.








    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 1 at 19:20









    jdscomms

    1825




    1825








    • 6




      "Defined legal concept" doesn't entail "there's no verb form," unless you can explain why.
      – Azor Ahai
      Dec 1 at 20:44












    • @AzorAhai I don't think he was making an implication, just stating independent facts.
      – Barmar
      Dec 4 at 8:05














    • 6




      "Defined legal concept" doesn't entail "there's no verb form," unless you can explain why.
      – Azor Ahai
      Dec 1 at 20:44












    • @AzorAhai I don't think he was making an implication, just stating independent facts.
      – Barmar
      Dec 4 at 8:05








    6




    6




    "Defined legal concept" doesn't entail "there's no verb form," unless you can explain why.
    – Azor Ahai
    Dec 1 at 20:44






    "Defined legal concept" doesn't entail "there's no verb form," unless you can explain why.
    – Azor Ahai
    Dec 1 at 20:44














    @AzorAhai I don't think he was making an implication, just stating independent facts.
    – Barmar
    Dec 4 at 8:05




    @AzorAhai I don't think he was making an implication, just stating independent facts.
    – Barmar
    Dec 4 at 8:05












    up vote
    2
    down vote













    The verb is the same as the noun - 'treason'. But the verb form is stated by the OED to be 'rare'.




    13.. K. Alis. 723 Thy fadir hastow tresond here!
    c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 105 Þei wer fulle wele knowen, þat wild haf tresond him.
    c1374 Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde iv. 410 (438) To traysen [v.r. trassen] a wight þat trewe is vn-to me.
    1890 L. Lewis Proving of Gennad xv. 104 Ere morning, thou shalt know who treasons thee.
    (Hide quotations)







    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      The verb is the same as the noun - 'treason'. But the verb form is stated by the OED to be 'rare'.




      13.. K. Alis. 723 Thy fadir hastow tresond here!
      c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 105 Þei wer fulle wele knowen, þat wild haf tresond him.
      c1374 Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde iv. 410 (438) To traysen [v.r. trassen] a wight þat trewe is vn-to me.
      1890 L. Lewis Proving of Gennad xv. 104 Ere morning, thou shalt know who treasons thee.
      (Hide quotations)







      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        2
        down vote










        up vote
        2
        down vote









        The verb is the same as the noun - 'treason'. But the verb form is stated by the OED to be 'rare'.




        13.. K. Alis. 723 Thy fadir hastow tresond here!
        c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 105 Þei wer fulle wele knowen, þat wild haf tresond him.
        c1374 Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde iv. 410 (438) To traysen [v.r. trassen] a wight þat trewe is vn-to me.
        1890 L. Lewis Proving of Gennad xv. 104 Ere morning, thou shalt know who treasons thee.
        (Hide quotations)







        share|improve this answer












        The verb is the same as the noun - 'treason'. But the verb form is stated by the OED to be 'rare'.




        13.. K. Alis. 723 Thy fadir hastow tresond here!
        c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 105 Þei wer fulle wele knowen, þat wild haf tresond him.
        c1374 Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde iv. 410 (438) To traysen [v.r. trassen] a wight þat trewe is vn-to me.
        1890 L. Lewis Proving of Gennad xv. 104 Ere morning, thou shalt know who treasons thee.
        (Hide quotations)








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 1 at 22:57









        Nigel J

        16.8k94281




        16.8k94281






















            up vote
            -2
            down vote













            No verb springs to mind, but the sentiment is captured by treachery.




            treachery noun



            1 : violation of allegiance or of faith and confidence : treason



            2 : an act of perfidy or treason




            • Marriam-Webster




            So the sentence would read: "The corporal was on trial for treachery".



            Note: As others have pointed out, certain words have different and specific meanings in law, so it depends whether you are describing the actual crime they are being tried for, or simply a general statement about its nature.






            share|improve this answer





















            • Treachery describes behavior or character. Treason is a criminal offense. No one is on trial for treachery.
              – michael.hor257k
              Dec 1 at 21:32










            • It is quite literally an act of treason. Much as one could be on trial for blowing up a house, and charged with arson, one may on trial for treachery and charged with treason.
              – Freddie R
              Dec 1 at 21:34












            • I don't think anyone would say "The corporal was on trial for killing."
              – michael.hor257k
              Dec 1 at 21:42










            • One could say "The corporal was on trial for killing his commanding officer", but since "treachery" doesn't really have the same construction so it is fine to leave as is.
              – Freddie R
              Dec 1 at 22:06






            • 1




              But OP asks for a verb, while treachery is a noun. If OP wanted to use a noun they could just use treason.
              – The Photon
              Dec 2 at 1:29















            up vote
            -2
            down vote













            No verb springs to mind, but the sentiment is captured by treachery.




            treachery noun



            1 : violation of allegiance or of faith and confidence : treason



            2 : an act of perfidy or treason




            • Marriam-Webster




            So the sentence would read: "The corporal was on trial for treachery".



            Note: As others have pointed out, certain words have different and specific meanings in law, so it depends whether you are describing the actual crime they are being tried for, or simply a general statement about its nature.






            share|improve this answer





















            • Treachery describes behavior or character. Treason is a criminal offense. No one is on trial for treachery.
              – michael.hor257k
              Dec 1 at 21:32










            • It is quite literally an act of treason. Much as one could be on trial for blowing up a house, and charged with arson, one may on trial for treachery and charged with treason.
              – Freddie R
              Dec 1 at 21:34












            • I don't think anyone would say "The corporal was on trial for killing."
              – michael.hor257k
              Dec 1 at 21:42










            • One could say "The corporal was on trial for killing his commanding officer", but since "treachery" doesn't really have the same construction so it is fine to leave as is.
              – Freddie R
              Dec 1 at 22:06






            • 1




              But OP asks for a verb, while treachery is a noun. If OP wanted to use a noun they could just use treason.
              – The Photon
              Dec 2 at 1:29













            up vote
            -2
            down vote










            up vote
            -2
            down vote









            No verb springs to mind, but the sentiment is captured by treachery.




            treachery noun



            1 : violation of allegiance or of faith and confidence : treason



            2 : an act of perfidy or treason




            • Marriam-Webster




            So the sentence would read: "The corporal was on trial for treachery".



            Note: As others have pointed out, certain words have different and specific meanings in law, so it depends whether you are describing the actual crime they are being tried for, or simply a general statement about its nature.






            share|improve this answer












            No verb springs to mind, but the sentiment is captured by treachery.




            treachery noun



            1 : violation of allegiance or of faith and confidence : treason



            2 : an act of perfidy or treason




            • Marriam-Webster




            So the sentence would read: "The corporal was on trial for treachery".



            Note: As others have pointed out, certain words have different and specific meanings in law, so it depends whether you are describing the actual crime they are being tried for, or simply a general statement about its nature.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Dec 1 at 21:17









            Freddie R

            77718




            77718












            • Treachery describes behavior or character. Treason is a criminal offense. No one is on trial for treachery.
              – michael.hor257k
              Dec 1 at 21:32










            • It is quite literally an act of treason. Much as one could be on trial for blowing up a house, and charged with arson, one may on trial for treachery and charged with treason.
              – Freddie R
              Dec 1 at 21:34












            • I don't think anyone would say "The corporal was on trial for killing."
              – michael.hor257k
              Dec 1 at 21:42










            • One could say "The corporal was on trial for killing his commanding officer", but since "treachery" doesn't really have the same construction so it is fine to leave as is.
              – Freddie R
              Dec 1 at 22:06






            • 1




              But OP asks for a verb, while treachery is a noun. If OP wanted to use a noun they could just use treason.
              – The Photon
              Dec 2 at 1:29


















            • Treachery describes behavior or character. Treason is a criminal offense. No one is on trial for treachery.
              – michael.hor257k
              Dec 1 at 21:32










            • It is quite literally an act of treason. Much as one could be on trial for blowing up a house, and charged with arson, one may on trial for treachery and charged with treason.
              – Freddie R
              Dec 1 at 21:34












            • I don't think anyone would say "The corporal was on trial for killing."
              – michael.hor257k
              Dec 1 at 21:42










            • One could say "The corporal was on trial for killing his commanding officer", but since "treachery" doesn't really have the same construction so it is fine to leave as is.
              – Freddie R
              Dec 1 at 22:06






            • 1




              But OP asks for a verb, while treachery is a noun. If OP wanted to use a noun they could just use treason.
              – The Photon
              Dec 2 at 1:29
















            Treachery describes behavior or character. Treason is a criminal offense. No one is on trial for treachery.
            – michael.hor257k
            Dec 1 at 21:32




            Treachery describes behavior or character. Treason is a criminal offense. No one is on trial for treachery.
            – michael.hor257k
            Dec 1 at 21:32












            It is quite literally an act of treason. Much as one could be on trial for blowing up a house, and charged with arson, one may on trial for treachery and charged with treason.
            – Freddie R
            Dec 1 at 21:34






            It is quite literally an act of treason. Much as one could be on trial for blowing up a house, and charged with arson, one may on trial for treachery and charged with treason.
            – Freddie R
            Dec 1 at 21:34














            I don't think anyone would say "The corporal was on trial for killing."
            – michael.hor257k
            Dec 1 at 21:42




            I don't think anyone would say "The corporal was on trial for killing."
            – michael.hor257k
            Dec 1 at 21:42












            One could say "The corporal was on trial for killing his commanding officer", but since "treachery" doesn't really have the same construction so it is fine to leave as is.
            – Freddie R
            Dec 1 at 22:06




            One could say "The corporal was on trial for killing his commanding officer", but since "treachery" doesn't really have the same construction so it is fine to leave as is.
            – Freddie R
            Dec 1 at 22:06




            1




            1




            But OP asks for a verb, while treachery is a noun. If OP wanted to use a noun they could just use treason.
            – The Photon
            Dec 2 at 1:29




            But OP asks for a verb, while treachery is a noun. If OP wanted to use a noun they could just use treason.
            – The Photon
            Dec 2 at 1:29


















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