revolt
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 9
- Words With Friends
- 11
- Letters
- 6
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Definition of revolt
7 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included
verb
-
(intransitive)To rebel, particularly against authority.
“The farmers had to revolt against the government to get what they deserved.”
“Our diſcontented Counties doe reuolt”
See all 7 definitions Show less
verb
-
(intransitive)To rebel, particularly against authority.
“The farmers had to revolt against the government to get what they deserved.”
“Our diſcontented Counties doe reuolt”
-
(transitive)To repel greatly.
“Your brother revolts me!”
“I shall be told, that this abominable medley is made rather to revolt young and ingenuous minds.”
“1870, John Morley, Condorcet (published in the Fortnightly Review To derive delight from what inflicts pain on any sentient creature revolted his conscience and offended his reason.”
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(intransitive)To be disgusted, shocked, or grossly offended; hence, to feel nausea; used with at.
“The stomach revolts at such food; his nature revolts at cruelty.”
-
To cause to turn back; to roll or drive back; to put to flight.
“The foring clouds into fad fhowres y molt; / So to her yold the flames, and did their force reuolt.”
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To turn away; to abandon or reject something; specifically, to turn away, or shrink, with abhorrence.
“And ſtill revolt when truth would ſet them free.”
“His clear intelligence revolted from the dominant sophisms of that time.”
- to perform a revolution in Tycoon, reversing the card hierarchy
noun
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(countable, uncountable)An act of revolting.
“— It's a revolt? — No, Sire, it's a revolution...”
“The first recorded use of “insurrection” in English, indeed, is in parliamentary papers describing the armed revolt led by Jack Cade in 1450, who marched on London to protest against the corruption of Henry VI’s government. […] Thinking more metaphorically, his American contemporary James Russell Lowell wrote: “It is not the insurrections of ignorance that are dangerous, but the revolts of intelligence.” Had he lived to the year 2021, he might have changed his mind.”
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
Borrowed from French révolter, from Italian rivoltare, itself either from ri- with the verb voltare, or possibly from a Vulgar Latin *revoltāre < *revolvitāre, for *revolūtāre, frequentative of Latin revolvō (“roll back”) (through its past participle revolūtus). Compare typologically Russian переворо́т (perevorót) (akin to верте́ть (vertétʹ).
Words you can make from revolt
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