Mutiny

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
mutiny
    n 1: open rebellion against constituted authority (especially by
         seamen or soldiers against their officers)
    v 1: engage in a mutiny against an authority
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Mutiny \Mu"ti*ny\, n.; pl. {Mutinies}. [From mutine to mutiny,
   fr. F. se mutiner, fr. F. mutin stubborn, mutinous, fr. OF.
   meute riot, LL. movita, fr. movitus, for L. motus, p. p. of
   movere to move. See {Move}.]
   1. Insurrection against constituted authority, particularly
      military or naval authority; concerted revolt against the
      rules of discipline or the lawful commands of a superior
      officer; hence, generally, forcible resistance to rightful
      authority; insubordination.
      [1913 Webster]

            In every mutiny against the discipline of the
            college, he was the ringleader.       --Macaulay.
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   2. Violent commotion; tumult; strife. [Obs.]
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            To raise a mutiny betwixt yourselves. --Shak.
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   {Mutiny act} (Law), an English statute reenacted annually to
      punish mutiny and desertion. --Wharton.
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   Syn: See {Insurrection}.
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from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Mutiny \Mu"ti*ny\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Mutinied}; p. pr. & vb.
   n. {Mutinying}.]
   1. To rise against, or refuse to obey, lawful authority in
      military or naval service; to excite, or to be guilty of,
      mutiny or mutinous conduct; to revolt against one's
      superior officer, or any rightful authority.
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   2. To fall into strife; to quarrel. [Obs.] --Shak.
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from Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)
MUTINY, crimes. The unlawful resistance of a superior officer, or the 
raising of commotions and disturbances on board of a ship against the 
authority of its commander, or in the army in opposition to the authority of 
the officers; a sedition; (q.v.) a revolt. (q.v.) 
     2. By the act for establishing rules and articles for the government of 
the armies of the United States, it is enacted as follows: Article 7. Any 
officer or soldier, who shall begin, excite, or cause, or join in, any 
mutiny or sedition in any troop or company in the service of the United 
States, or in any party, post, detachment or guard, shall suffer death, or 
such other punishment as by a court martial shall be inflicted. Article 8. 
Any officer, non-commissioned officer, or soldier, who being present at any 
mutiny or sedition, does not use his utmost endeavors to suppress the same, 
or coming to the knowledge of any intended mutiny, does not without delay 
give information thereof to his commanding officer, shall be punished by the 
sentence of a court martial, with death, or otherwise, according to the 
nature of his offence. 
     3. And by the act for the better government of the navy of the United 
States, it is enacted as follows,: Article 13. If any person in the navy 
shall make or attempt to make any mutinous assembly, he shall, on conviction 
thereof by, a court martial, suffer death; and if any person as aforesaid, 
shall utter any seditious or mutinous words, or shall conceal or connive at 
any mutinous or seditious practices, or shall treat with contempt his 
superior, being in the execution of his office, or being witness to any 
mutiny or sedition, shall not do his utmost to suppress it, he shall be 
punished at the discretion of a court martial. Vide 2 Stra. R. 1264. 
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
51 Moby Thesaurus words for "mutiny":
      arise, civil disorder, disobedience, disobey, emeute,
      general uprising, indiscipline, insubordination, insurge,
      insurgence, insurgency, insurrect, insurrection, interregnum,
      irresponsibility, jacquerie, lawlessness, levee en masse, license,
      licentiousness, mount the barricades, mutineer, outbreak,
      overthrow, peasant revolt, power vacuum, putsch, rampant will,
      rebel, rebellion, reluct, reluctate, revolt, revolute, revolution,
      revolutionize, riot, rise, rise against, rise up, rising, run riot,
      strike, subversion, subversiveness, subvert, unaccountability,
      uncontrol, unrestraint, uprising, willfulness

    

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