0 a situation in which many people protest or complain -- opprør [ neuter ]
There was an uproar when they raised taxes again. Det ble bråk da de satte opp skattene igjen.
1 (an outbreak of) noise, shouting etc -- oppstyr, bråk, skrik(ing)
I sit in my room in the very headquarters of the uproar of the entire house.
His book caused such a southern uproar that he was forced to recant in 1861.
Even some of the simpler procedures often caused uproar among children too young to understand explanations, so patience was needed to secure reasonably accurate measurements.
State and hospital officials refused to release other bodies from the morgue for burial until the uproar quieted, leveraging the dead as blackmail.
An uproar ensued, led by those wishing to sabotage the repeat.
The uproar concerning the child rages outside the silent space that it encloses.
There is no mésure here, but artist and viewer enjoy the uproar, because unruly high spirits are the mark and privilege of youth.
The uproar about inmates was more agitated in peripheral parishes.
中文繁体
喧囂, 嘈雜, 吵鬧…
More中文简体
喧嚣, 嘈杂, 吵闹…
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tumulto, alboroto [masculine, singular]…
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tumulto…
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kargaşa, hengâme, gürültü patırtı…
MoreFrançais
vive indignation [feminine], tumulte…
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zmatek, vřava…
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oprør, tumult…
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