0 to refuse to do something that you are told to do:
1 to intentionally fail to do what you are told or expected to do; not obey:
We do not call to topple them or disobey them.
Each individual child was classified as either obeying or disobeying each grammatical principle.
Rather than disobey and incur sanctions, these actors may alter their conduct in an effort to avoid the rule.
First, the rule might prevent the agent from considering the reasons for disobeying the rule.
Punishment of those who disobey a given command does not in itself satisfy the objective, should others still refuse to given in.
The private knows that if he disobeys the order, he will be punished.
It is when one cannot conceive how a command is good that deciding whether to obey or disobey is most difficult.
First, right reason could dictate that a divine command be disobeyed.