0 an occasion when a group of people, especially soldiers or sailors, refuses to obey orders and/or attempts to take control from people in authority:
1 to take part in a mutiny:
2 refusal to obey orders, or a violent attempt to take control from people in authority, esp. in the military or on a ship:
At the time, however, the mutinies seemed far more threatening.
Nevertheless, this book makes a useful contribution to historical debates about the causes of the mutinies.
The chief challenge to the government's authority was not leftwing insurgency but right-wing military mutinies.
The army mutiny of 1964 had created fears about the country's stability and produced a greater intolerance of dissent.
The war itself brought further atrocities, especially as desperation led to mutiny.
Passages that were deemed to be incitements to mutiny were just as likely to be made examples of as those that ridiculed monarchy.
Fears of a military mutiny were not limited to the duke's opponents.
Then there was a 'mutiny,' as all the carriers wanted to return from whence they had come.
中文繁体
(尤指士兵或船員的)叛亂,嘩變,暴動, 反叛,叛變, 嘩變…
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(尤指士兵或船员的)反叛,哗变,暴动, 反叛,叛变, 哗变…
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motín, amotinamiento, amotinarse…
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motim, rebelião, amotinar-se…
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ayaklanma, isyan…
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mutinerie, se mutiner…
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vzpoura, vzbouřit se…
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mytteri, gøre mytteri…
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