0 If a group of people are rebellious, they oppose the ideas of the people in authority and plan to change the system, often using force:
1 having strong feelings of disagreement with people in authority, an organization, or a government, esp. showing such feelings through force:
At the last minute, however, the prospect of being expelled from the party forced them to abort their rebellious plan.
Put in the contemporary context, this change also mirrored the overall rebellious zeitgeist of civil society, which was beginning to witness protests over many issues.
Working, he said, makes one industrious, and fatigue combats lascivious and rebellious thought.
Also, what is the typical profile of the music student who is sensitive to criticism: shy, withdrawn and quiet or confrontational and rebellious?
He explains how he 'pulled himself together and did well at school' instead of 'feeling rebellious'.
The rebellious street binds together political dissidents, marginals, the unemployed, and disillusioned youth.
He would recite scenes from succeeding drafts to fellow-pupils who found their own rebellious feelings echoed in the script's high passions and exuberant language.
The apparently haphazard results upset the authorities because the buildings were seen as political statements of the rebellious student population of the time.
中文繁体
(常使用武力)反叛的,造反的,反抗的, 桀驁不馴的, 難以控制的…
More中文简体
(常使用武力)反叛的,造反的,反抗的, 桀骜不驯的, 难以控制的…
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rebelde, insurrecto, rebelde [masculine-feminine…
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rebelde, insurreto…
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isyankâr, âsi, söz dinlemez…
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rebelle…
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povstalecký, vzpurný…
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oprørsk…
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