English-Thai Dictionary
mutiny
N การขัดขืน คำสั่ง การฝ่าฝืน คำสั่ง kan-kad-kam-sang
mutiny
N การจลาจล การกบฏ การ ลุกฮือ ขึ้น ต่อต้าน อำนาจ uprising overthrow kan-ja-ra-jon
mutiny
VI ก่อ การจลาจล ก่อ การกบฏ ต่อต้าน อำนาจ kan-kor-ja-ra-jon
mutiny
VI ขัดขืน คำสั่ง กำแหง กำเริบ กระด้างกระเดื่อง ฝ่าฝืน kad-kuan-kam-sang
mutiny against
PHRV ไม่ยอม เชื่อฟัง คำ สั่งของ ขัดขืน คำสั่ง mai-yom-chue-fang-kam-sang-son
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
MUTINY
n.[L. muto, to change. ] An insurrection of soldiers or seamen against the authority of their commanders; open resistance of officers or opposition to their authority. A mutiny is properly the act of numbers, but by statutes and orders for governing the army and navy in different countries, the acts which constitute mutiny are multiplied and defined; and acts of individuals, amounting to a resistance of the authority or lawful commands of officers, are declared to be mutiny. Any attempt to excite opposition to lawful authority, or any act of contempt towards officers, or disobedience of commands, is by the British mutiny act declared to be mutiny. Any concealment of mutinous acts, or neglect to attempt a suppression of them, is declared also to be mutiny. [Note-In good authors who lived a century ago, mutiny and mutinous were applied to insurrection and sedition in civil society. But I believe these words are now applied exclusively to soldiers and seamen.]
MUTINY
v.i.To rise against lawful authority in military and naval service; to excite or attempt to excite opposition to the lawful commands of military and naval officers; to commit some act which tends to bring the authority of officers into contempt, or in any way to promote insubordination.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
MUTINY
Mu "ti *ny, n.; pl. Mutinies. Etym: [From mutine to mutiny, fr. F. se mutiner, fr. F. mutin stubborn, mutinous, fr. OF. meute riot, LL. movita, fr. movitus, for L. motus, p.p. of movere to move. See Move. ]
1. Insurrection against constituted authority, particularly military or naval authority; concerted revolt against the rules of discipline or the lawful commands of a superior officer; hence, generally, forcible resistance to rightful authority; insubordination. In every mutiny against the discipline of the college, he was the ringleader. Macaulay.
2. Violent commotion; tumult; strife. [Obs. ] o raise a mutiny betwixt yourselves. Shak. Mutiny act (Law ), an English statute reënacted annually to punish mutiny and desertion. Wharton.
Syn. -- See Insurrection.
MUTINY
Mu "ti *ny, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Mutinied; p. pr. & vb. n. Mutinying.]
1. To rise against, or refuse to obey, lawful authority in military or naval service; to excite, or to be guilty of, mutiny or mutinous conduct; to revolt against one's superior officer, or any rightful authority.
2. To fall into strifle; to quarrel. [Obs. ] Shak.
New American Oxford Dictionary
mutiny
mu ti ny |ˈmyo͞otn -ē ˈmjutni | ▶noun ( pl. mutinies ) an open rebellion against the proper authorities, esp. by soldiers or sailors against their officers: a mutiny by those manning the weapons could trigger a global war | mutiny at sea. ▶verb ( mutinies, mutinying, mutinied ) [ no obj. ] refuse to obey the orders of a person in authority. ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from obsolete mutine ‘rebellion, ’ from French mutin ‘mutineer, ’ based on Latin movere ‘to move. ’
Oxford Dictionary
mutiny
mu ¦tiny |ˈmjuːtɪni | ▶noun ( pl. mutinies ) an open rebellion against the proper authorities, especially by soldiers or sailors against their officers: a mutiny by those manning the weapons could trigger a global war | [ mass noun ] : the crew were on the verge of mutiny. ▶verb ( mutinies, mutinying, mutinied ) [ no obj. ] refuse to obey the orders of a person in authority: thousands of the soldiers mutinied over the non-payment of wages. ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from obsolete mutine ‘rebellion ’, from French mutin ‘mutineer ’, based on Latin movere ‘to move ’.
American Oxford Thesaurus
mutiny
mutiny noun there was a mutiny over wages: insurrection, rebellion, revolt, riot, uprising, insurgence, insubordination. ▶verb thousands of soldiers mutinied: rise up, rebel, revolt, riot, disobey /defy authority, be insubordinate.
Oxford Thesaurus
mutiny
mutiny noun the mutiny over pay arrears had spread to the armed forces: insurrection, rebellion, revolt, riot, revolution, uprising, rising, coup, coup d'état, putsch, protest, strike; insurgence, insurgency, subversion, sedition, anarchy, disorder, insubordination, disobedience, resistance, defiance. ▶verb thousands of soldiers mutinied: rise up, rebel, revolt, riot, take part in an insurrection /uprising, resist /oppose authority, disobey /defy authority, refuse to obey orders; be insubordinate, protest, strike, go on strike.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
mutiny
mu ti ny /mjúːt (ə )ni /名詞 複 -nies U C 反乱, 暴動 ; (軍人の上官に対する )反抗, 抵抗 (→revolt ).動詞 -nies ; -nied ; ~ing 自動詞 «…に対して » 反乱 [暴動 ]を起こす ; 【上官に 】抵抗する «against » .