revolt
noun
verb
rɪˈvəʊlt
noun
1
a
refusal
to
accept
someone’s
authority
or
obey
rules
or
laws
〔对权威、规定、法律的〕反抗,违抗;
The
prime
minister
is
now
facing
a
revolt
by
members
of
his
own
party.
首相现在面临着党内倒戈。
[+
against
]
a
revolt
against
authority
对权威的反抗
[+
over
]
a
revolt
over
the
proposed
spending
cuts
对缩减开支建议的反对
in
revolt
French
farmers
are
in
revolt
over
cheap
imports.
法国农场主正在抗议廉价的进口产品。
2
strong
and
often
violent
action
by
a
lot
of
people
against
their
ruler
or
government
反叛,叛乱; 造反,起义;
the
Polish
revolt
of
1863
1863 年的波兰起义
[+
against
]
a
revolt
against
the
central
government
对中央政府的反叛
[+
of
]
the
successful
revolt
of
the
American
colonies
美国殖民地成功的反抗
put
down/crush
a
revolt
(use
military
force
to
stop
it)
镇压叛乱
Troops
loyal
to
the
President
crushed
the
revolt.
忠于总统的军队镇压了叛乱。
verb
3
if
people
revolt,
they
take
strong
and
often
violent
action
against
the
government,
usually
with
the
aim
of
taking
power
away
from
them
反叛,叛乱; 造反,起义;
I
[+
against
]
It
was
feared
that
the
army
would
revolt
against
the
government.
有人担心军队会起而反对政府。
4
to
refuse
to
accept
someone’s
authority
or
obey
rules
or
laws
反抗,拒绝服从(权威、规定或法律);
I
[+
against
]
Some
members
of
the
government
may
revolt
against
this
proposed
legislation.
一些政府成员可能会反对这项拟议中的法规。
5
if
something
revolts
you,
it
is
so
unpleasant
that
it
makes
you
feel
sick
and
shocked
使作呕; 使反感; 使震惊;
T usually passive 一般用被动态
He
was
revolted
by
the
smell.
他闻到那味道就恶心。