mutiny
柯林斯詞典
1. N-VAR A mutiny is a refusal by people, usually soldiers or sailors, to continue obeying a person in authority. (常指士兵或水手的) 嘩變
A series of coup attempts and mutinies within the armed forces destabilized the regime. 武裝部隊內(nèi)部一系列政變圖謀和嘩變動搖了該政權(quán)。
2. V-I If a group of people, usually soldiers or sailors, mutiny, they refuse to continue obeying a person in authority. 反叛
Units stationed around the capital mutinied because they had received no pay for nine months. 駐扎在首都周邊的部隊反叛了,因為他們9個月沒領(lǐng)到工資了。
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mutiny /?mju?t?n?/ (mutinying,mutinied,mutinies)
劍橋詞典
- an occasion when a group of people , especially soldiers or sailors , refuses to obey orders and/or attempts to take control from people in authority
(尤指士兵或船員的)反叛,嘩變,暴動
Conditions on the ship were often very bad , and crews were on the point of mutiny. 船上的情況常常十分糟糕,船員們隨時可能發(fā)生嘩變。
There were rumours of mutiny among the troops . 部隊里有兵變的傳言。
Soldiers crushed mutinies in three jails . 士兵鎮(zhèn)壓了3個監(jiān)獄的暴動。 返回 mutiny