Rebelde in english

Rebel

pronunciation: rebəl part of speech: noun, verb
In gestures

rebelde1 = insurgent ; rebel ; insurrectionist ; rebel fighter. 

Example: While the drug smugglers are said to be stronger than the states in which they live, Marxist insurgents have been fighting with them for several years.Example: The article is entitled 'The Luddites and their war on the Industrial Revolution: rebels against the future: lessons for the computer age'.Example: Insurrectionist theory allows for this, but in practice insurrectionists do not always make the wisest choices.Example: Two thirds of the rebel fighters in Syria are citizens of European countries.

more:

» controlado por rebeldesrebel-held .

Example: Top US envoy, John Kerry, clings to hope that diplomacy can salvage Syria, as Damascus resumes offensive on rebel-held Aleppo.

» en manos de rebeldesrebel-held .

Example: Top US envoy, John Kerry, clings to hope that diplomacy can salvage Syria, as Damascus resumes offensive on rebel-held Aleppo.

» un rebelde sin causaa rebel without a cause .

Example: He went on to say that a psychopath is 'a rebel without a cause, an agitator without a slogan, a revolutionary without a program'.

rebelde2 = punk ; enfant terrible. 

Example: Cyberpunk is a cultural label encompassing many different kinds of punk attitudes, including clothing and lifestyle choices.Example: Vesalius, considered in his time a scientific 'enfant terrible,' revolutionized medicine and science by insisting that truth could be established only by direct observation.

rebelde3 = unruly ; rebellious ; insurgent ; fractious ; wayward ; resistive ; disorderly ; riotous ; insurrectionary ; bolshie [boshy] ; insurrectionist ; recalcitrant. 

Example: 'Sometimes the kids get a little unruly!' she announced in that easy familiar style of hers as she sat down.Example: The urge to mechanize paper-making came at first as much from the papermakers' desire to free themselves from dependence upon their skilled but rebellious workmen as from the pursuit of production economies.Example: This growth accompanied an insurgent professionalism.Example: Thus was Christianity codified into a Bible that still today is the central element in the faith of the two billion adherents of the largest, if most fractious, of the world's religions.Example: The article 'The wayward scholar: resources and research in popular culture' defends popular culture as a legitimate and important library resource.Example: This game was developed in order to facilitate the therapeutic process for those children who are `inhibited, constrained or resistive'.Example: As expected, students in disorderly schools tend to have higher misbehavior and lower achievement.Example: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.Example: Most obviously, the insurrectionary movements of the late-eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were informed by notions of nationality.Example: I showed one of the staff the video and he got quite bolshie with me, as my taping her was, according to him, a breach of her human rights.Example: Insurrectionist theory allows for this, but in practice insurrectionists do not always make the wisest choices.Example: Not all housing problems originated from local authorities, private tenants frequently had to contend with recalcitrant landlords.

more:

» ángel rebelderebel angel .

Example: Among concepts that seem to be the guardian angels of school reform, coherence is a rebel angel, advancing human learning, but escaping control.

» combatiente rebelderebel fighter .

Example: Two thirds of the rebel fighters in Syria are citizens of European countries.

» de forma rebelderebelliously .

Example: How can we act intelligently when adolescence impels us to act rebelliously?.

» de manera rebelderebelliously .

Example: How can we act intelligently when adolescence impels us to act rebelliously?.

» de un modo rebelderebelliously .

Example: How can we act intelligently when adolescence impels us to act rebelliously?.

» ejército rebelderebel army .

Example: At its peak in 1987, the rebel army consisted of more than 25000 fighters.

» guerrillero rebelderebel guerrilla .

Example: He was kidnapped by rebel guerrillas in the Colombian jungle and held captive for 102 days.

Rebelde synonyms

arise in spanish: surgir, pronunciation: ɜraɪz part of speech: verb rise in spanish: subir, pronunciation: raɪz part of speech: noun, verb maverick in spanish: disidente, pronunciation: mævɜrɪk part of speech: noun renegade in spanish: renegado, pronunciation: renəgeɪd part of speech: noun insurgent in spanish: insurgente, pronunciation: ɪnsɜrdʒənt part of speech: adjective, noun rebellious in spanish: rebelde, pronunciation: rɪbeljəs part of speech: adjective southern in spanish: del Sur, pronunciation: sʌðɜrn part of speech: adjective reb in spanish: rebote, pronunciation: reb part of speech: noun johnny in spanish: johnny, pronunciation: dʒɑni part of speech: noun grayback in spanish: greyback, pronunciation: greɪbæk part of speech: noun rise up in spanish: Crecer, pronunciation: raɪzʌp part of speech: verb mutineer in spanish: amotinado, pronunciation: mjutənɪr part of speech: noun insurrectionist in spanish: insurgente, pronunciation: ɪnsɜrekʃənɪst part of speech: noun rebelling in spanish: rebelde, pronunciation: rɪbelɪŋ part of speech: verb johnny reb in spanish: johnny reb, pronunciation: dʒɑnireb part of speech: noun
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