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    rebel

    noun

    verb

    • 1. rise in opposition or armed resistance to an established government or leader: "the Earl of Pembroke subsequently rebelled against Henry III" Similar revoltmutinyriotrise up

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. a person who refuses to accept the government’s power and uses force to oppose it, or a person who opposes authority and thinks or behaves differently: The government tried to set up talks with the rebels. Though he dressed unusually, he never meant to be a rebel. US history.

  3. The meaning of REBEL is opposing or taking arms against a government or ruler. How to use rebel in a sentence.

  4. What does rebel mean? A rebel is a person who resists or defies rules or norms or rises up against the powers that be. In its more serious sense, a rebel is a revolutionary trying to overthrow a government.

  5. A rebel is someone who fights authority. The story of a rebel often finds its way into books and movies. In the 1950s film "Rebel without a Cause," a teenager rebels against his parents. In the "Star Wars" movies, the Jedi rebel against the Empire. A rebel, whether the cause they are fighting for is just or not, is always the underdog.

  6. a person who refuses to accept the governments power and uses force to oppose it, or a person who opposes authority and thinks or behaves differently: The government tried to set up talks with the rebels. Though he dressed unusually, he never meant to be a rebel. US history.

  7. Rebels are people who are fighting against their own country's army in order to change the political system there. ...fighting between rebels and government forces. ...rebel forces in Liberia. Synonyms: revolutionary, resistance fighter, insurgent, secessionist More Synonyms of rebel. 2. countable noun B2.

  8. a person who opposes somebody in authority over them within an organization, a political party, etc. A number of Tory rebels are planning to vote against the government. The Education Secretary has made further concessions to the back-bench rebels. Oxford Collocations Dictionary.

  9. 1. To refuse allegiance to and oppose by force an established government or ruling authority. 2. To resist or defy an authority or a generally accepted convention. 3. To feel or express strong unwillingness or repugnance: She rebelled at the unwelcome suggestion. n. reb·el (rĕb′əl) 1. One who rebels or is in rebellion. 2.

  10. noun. a person who refuses allegiance to, resists, or rises in arms against the government or ruler of their country. Synonyms: insurrectionist, insurgent, traitor, mutineer. a person who resists any authority, control, or tradition.

  11. rebel (against somebody/something) to fight against or refuse to obey an authority, for example a government, a system, your parents, etc. He later rebelled against his strict religious upbringing. Most teenagers find something to rebel against.

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