0 violent action organized by a group of people who are trying to change the political system in their country:
1 violent action organized by a group of people who refuse to accept their government’s power and are willing to use force to oppose it:
[ C ] The African-American Nat Turner led an 1831 rebellion.
[ U ] Many students were in rebellion against the older generation.
In response, periodic but intense rebellions erupted throughout the country over the next five years.
Her analyses of railway construction, colonial exhibitions, and rebellions are wide-ranging.
Students of social movements, revolutions, rebellions, and general political violence would cer tainly take issue with such a simple linkage.
The examples of rebellions led by religious figures are numerous.
Far from threatening democracy, the four rebellions may indeed have helped in its consolidation.
The rebellions exacerbated planter suspicion of missionaries.
The military proved more resilient than expected, however, protagonising rebellions in the face of human rights prosecutions and achieving the introduction of amnesty provisions and pardons in 1986 and 1987.
In secure accommodation for children, there were no cases of protest movements, mutinies, rebellions or hunger strikes.
中文繁体
反叛,造反, 叛亂, 叛逆…
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反叛,造反, 叛乱, 叛逆…
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rebelión, sublevación, rebelión [feminine…
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rebelião…
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反逆, 反乱, 暴動…
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isyan, ayaklanma, başkaldırı…
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rébellion [feminine], révolte [feminine], rébellion…
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rebel·lió…
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