factional

[ fak-shuh-nl ]
/ ˈfæk ʃə nl /

adjective

of a faction or factions.
self-interested; partisan: Factional interests had obstructed justice.

Origin of factional

First recorded in 1640–50; faction1 + -al1

OTHER WORDS FROM factional

fac·tion·al·ism, noun fac·tion·al·ist, noun in·ter·fac·tion·al, adjective un·fac·tion·al, adjective

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH factional

factional factious fractious

Example sentences from the Web for factionalism

  • Factionalism is a class spirit which will sacrifice the interest of the whole to the interest of the class.

    Ethics in Service |William Howard Taft
  • The sources of this factionalism were varied, and some of them had little to do with the affairs of Virginia.

  • This factionalism contributed largely to the overthrow of the radicals.

    The Sequel of Appomattox |Walter Lynwood Fleming
  • But within five years the order was rent by factionalism and in 1878 was acknowledged to be dead.

    The Armies of Labor |Samuel P. Orth