0 If a large number of people revolt, they refuse to be controlled or ruled, and take action against authority, often violent action:
The people revolted against foreign rule and established their own government.
1 to make someone feel unpleasantly shocked or disgusted:
2 an attempt to get rid of a government by using violence:
Troops were called in to crush/put down the revolt.
The army is in revolt (against its commanders).
3 to take violent action against authority, or to refuse to be controlled or ruled:
Californians may be ready to revolt against broad cuts in government services.
4 to make someone feel disgusted:
I was revolted by his cruelty.
Most were appalled and revolted by such a prospect.
The year 1675 saw the last major anti-tax revolts of the ancien regime.#!
The tax revolts suggest the political limits of progressive financing.
All over the country isolated revolts or efforts against legalistic gobbledygook at the federal, state and corporate levels seemed to grow into a small revolution.
The rivalry between the revolting ministers is an essential part of the story.
70) and the revolts in the years that followed.
Once independence was achieved, he led four revolts (1822, 1823, 1828 and 1832) before being elected president of the republic.
Throughout the 1870s, the condition of the kingdom deteriorated, as food shortages and inflation incited popular revolts and a crime wave of dacoity which the authorities proved powerless to quell.
中文繁体
戰鬥, 反抗, 造反…
More中文简体
战斗, 反抗, 造反…
MoreEspañol
rebelión, sublevación, rebelarse…
MorePortuguês
rebelião, revolta, sublevação…
More日本語
反乱, 暴動, 反乱を起こす…
MoreTürk dili
isyan, ayaklanma, başkaldırı…
MoreFrançais
se révolter, se soulever, révolter…
MoreCatalan
revolta, rebel·lió, revoltar-se…
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