insurrect
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insurrect — in·sur·rect … English syllables
insurrect — |in(t)sə|rekt intransitive verb Etymology: back formation from insurrection : to make or engage in insurrection … Useful english dictionary
Chu–Han contention — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Chu Han contention caption= date=206 ndash;202 BC place=China result=Han victory combatant1=Principality of Han combatant2=Western Chu commander1=Liu Bang, Han Xin, Zhang Liang, Xiao He, Peng Yue… … Wikipedia
Insurrection (trojan horse) — Insurrection is a remote administration tool or remote administration trojan (RAT) as well as a backdoor program that allows an intruder to secretly and remotely access a person s computer using a client program installed on the intruder s PC and … Wikipedia
Sailors' mutiny — (September 1931) ( es. La Rebelion de los Marineros) was a violent rebellion of the Chilean Navy enlisted men against the government of Chilean Vice President Manuel Trucco.BackgroundIn 1931, Chile was bankrupt. The situation had caused the… … Wikipedia
insurrection — insurrectional, adj. insurrectionally, adv. insurrectionism, n. insurrectionist, n. /in seuh rek sheuhn/, n. an act or instance of rising in revolt, rebellion, or resistance against civil authority or an established government. [1425 75; late ME… … Universalium
secede — I verb abandon, abire, apostatize, break away, decedere, depart, desert, disaffiliate, dissent, evacuate, insurrect, leave, mutiny, pull out, quit, rebel, refuse to support, relinquish, remove oneself, repudiate, resign, retire, retract, revolt,… … Law dictionary
disobey — I verb act illegally, arise, be derelict, be disloyal, be insubordinate, be mutinous, be negligent, be perfidious, be recalcitrant, be recusant, be treasonous, be undisciplined, be unruly, betray, break a law, break a rule, break the law, commit… … Law dictionary
rebel — I verb arise, be disloyal, be insubordinate, be treasonable, betray, break with, concitare, defy, denounce, dethrone, disobey, insurrect, mutiny, oppose, overthrow, recalcitrate, refuse to conform, refuse to support, renounce, resist, resist… … Law dictionary
FRONDE — La Fronde est une période de troubles et de guerre civile qui s’est étendue sur quatre années, de 1648 à 1652, pendant la minorité de Louis XIV. La diversité des événements et la complexité de cette crise en ont rendu l’interprétation difficile… … Encyclopédie Universelle