释义 |
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024mu•ti•neer (myo̅o̅t′n ēr′),USA pronunciation n. - a person who mutinies.
- Vulgar Latin *movita, feminine of *movitus, variant of Latin mōtus, past participle of movēre to move + -in -ine1) + -ier -ier2; see -eer
- Middle French mutinier, equivalent. to mutin mutiny, mutinous (meut(e) mutiny
- 1600–10
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: mutineer /ˌmjuːtɪˈnɪə/ n - a person who mutinies
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024mu•ti•ny /ˈmyutəni/USA pronunciation n., pl. -nies, v., -nied, -ny•ing. n. - rebellion against legal authority, esp. by sailors or soldiers against their officers: [uncountable]guilty of mutiny.[countable]a short mutiny on board the ship.
v. [no object] - to commit mutiny:The crew mutinied because of bad food.
mu•ti•neer, n. [countable] mu•ti•nous, adj. : a mutinous crew with no sense of morals. WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024mu•ti•ny (myo̅o̅t′n ē),USA pronunciation n., pl. -nies, v., -nied, -ny•ing. n. - revolt or rebellion against constituted authority, esp. by sailors against their officers.
- rebellion against any authority.
v.i. - to commit the offense of mutiny;
revolt against authority.
- Middle French mutiner, derivative of mutin mutiny; see mutineer) + -y3
- obsolete mutine to mutiny (1560–70
- 2.See corresponding entry in Unabridged uprising, overthrow, coup, takeover.
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