Mutiny Meaning in English
word
/ˈmjutəni/
MYOO-tuh-nee
/mjˈuːtɪni/
MYOO-ti-nee
التعريف
A mutiny is when a group, usually soldiers or sailors, openly refuses to obey orders from their leaders and takes control. It often happens on ships or in the military.
الاستخدام والفروق الدقيقة
Primarily used in military or naval contexts for rebellion against authority. Less common in civilian situations. 'Mutiny' can be both noun and verb ('to mutiny'). Often seen in phrases like 'lead a mutiny', 'put down a mutiny', or 'mutiny breaks out'.
Spanish: motín - sublevaciónPortuguese (BR): motimPortuguese (PT): motimChinese (Simplified): 叛变 - 哗变Chinese (Traditional): 叛變 - 嘩變Hindi: विद्रोह (समुद्री/सैन्य)Arabic: تمرد (على السفينة/عسكري)Bengali: বিদ্রোহ (নৌ / সামরিক)Russian: мятеж (на корабле/армейский)Japanese: 反乱(特に船や軍隊で)Vietnamese: nổi loạn (trên tàu hoặc trong quân đội)Korean: 반란 (특히 선박이나 군대에서)Turkish: isyan (gemi/askeri)Urdu: بغاوت (جہاز یا فوج میں)Indonesian: pemberontakan (di kapal/angkatan bersenjata)
جمل نموذجية
The sailors started a mutiny on the ship.
basic
There was a mutiny in the army camp.
basic
The captain stopped the mutiny before it got worse.
basic
Rumors of mutiny spread quickly through the crew.
natural
They threatened mutiny if their demands weren't met.
natural
After the mutiny, nothing was ever the same on board.
natural