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词汇 seditious
释义

Definition of seditious in English:

seditious

adjective sɪˈdɪʃəssəˈdɪʃəs
  • Inciting or causing people to rebel against the authority of a state or monarch.

    煽动性的;煽动叛乱的

    the letter was declared seditious

    这封书信被宣布具有煽动性。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘They're thinking of using the treason laws against seditious clerics,’ I said over breakfast last Monday, catching up with the news.
    • These are exciting, radical, almost seditious ideas in this conservative country.
    • Can denunciations of the cosmopolitans who corrupt our youth with seditious ideas be far behind?
    • The authorities clamped down on seditious behaviour.
    • For example, the crime of ‘possession of seditious publications’ was deleted, but ‘dealing with seditious publications’ would still be a crime.
    • The laws of libel needed no reinforcement and proceedings for seditious or criminal libel should be used sparingly.
    • All nineteen of the company's editorial computers were taken by police following a complaint from the youth wing of the ruling political party that a letter published by the news service was seditious and could incite racial hatred.
    • It is more likely that the articles embodied the intent of serving as parameters against seditious speech aimed at inciting action to illegally overthrow a government.
    • Most of the members of that organization, now declared seditious and outlawed, left the state as fast as they could.
    • John had reached the age, however, at which he began to question authority - not in the treasonous, seditious way Aaron and Andrew once had, but in a more innocent, juvenile way.
    • The seditious spirit of the colonies owes its birth to the factions in this House.
    • These were seen by authorities as very partial, untrue, seditious, and savouring too much of dangerous and traitorous conceits.
    • The question in pluralist systems is whether or not potentially seditious individuals can be taken under surveillance or arrested without violating civil liberties and undermining the rule of law.
    • He played the song incessantly, ignoring my pleas for mercy and grannyish objections to its author's seditious intent.
    • Individuals are being arrested and detained for lengthy periods, often without trial, for disseminating information judged to be seditious via the Internet.
    • The legislation declares that publications will only be considered seditious when there is ‘an intention to incite others’ to commit treason, subversion or secession.
    • In the name of press freedom and nationalism we deliberately wrote seditious and criminally libellous articles against colonial governments.
    • He described Thomas Paine as a traitor to his country, a wicked, malicious, seditious and ill-disposed individual, who had actively supported both the American and the French Revolutions.
    • Sometimes the humble person who has helped a disguised king fears the worst when the latter's identity is revealed - has he behaved disrespectfully, or said anything seditious or incriminating?
    • Twelve leaders were framed in 1916 on a charge of seditious conspiracy as a result of their campaign of direct action against the war effort.
    Synonyms
    rabble-rousing, inciting, agitating, fomenting, troublemaking, provocative, inflammatory
    revolutionary, rebellious, insurrectionist, mutinous, insurgent, subversive, insubordinate, civil disobedience, dissident, defiant, disloyal, treasonous

Derivatives

  • seditiously

  • adverb sɪˈdɪʃəslisəˈdɪʃəsli
    • ‘Here we go again’, we will mutter seditiously.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French seditieux or Latin seditiosus, from seditio 'mutinous separation' (see sedition).

Rhymes

adventitious, Aloysius, ambitious, auspicious, avaricious, capricious, conspicuous, delicious, expeditious, factitious, fictitious, flagitious, judicious, lubricious, malicious, Mauritius, meretricious, nutritious, officious, pernicious, propitious, repetitious, siliceous, superstitious, suppositious, surreptitious, suspicious, vicious

Definition of seditious in US English:

seditious

adjectivesəˈdɪʃəssəˈdiSHəs
  • Inciting or causing people to rebel against the authority of a state or monarch.

    煽动性的;煽动叛乱的

    the letter was declared seditious

    这封书信被宣布具有煽动性。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • All nineteen of the company's editorial computers were taken by police following a complaint from the youth wing of the ruling political party that a letter published by the news service was seditious and could incite racial hatred.
    • Individuals are being arrested and detained for lengthy periods, often without trial, for disseminating information judged to be seditious via the Internet.
    • These were seen by authorities as very partial, untrue, seditious, and savouring too much of dangerous and traitorous conceits.
    • Most of the members of that organization, now declared seditious and outlawed, left the state as fast as they could.
    • For example, the crime of ‘possession of seditious publications’ was deleted, but ‘dealing with seditious publications’ would still be a crime.
    • ‘They're thinking of using the treason laws against seditious clerics,’ I said over breakfast last Monday, catching up with the news.
    • The question in pluralist systems is whether or not potentially seditious individuals can be taken under surveillance or arrested without violating civil liberties and undermining the rule of law.
    • The legislation declares that publications will only be considered seditious when there is ‘an intention to incite others’ to commit treason, subversion or secession.
    • It is more likely that the articles embodied the intent of serving as parameters against seditious speech aimed at inciting action to illegally overthrow a government.
    • In the name of press freedom and nationalism we deliberately wrote seditious and criminally libellous articles against colonial governments.
    • The authorities clamped down on seditious behaviour.
    • The laws of libel needed no reinforcement and proceedings for seditious or criminal libel should be used sparingly.
    • These are exciting, radical, almost seditious ideas in this conservative country.
    • The seditious spirit of the colonies owes its birth to the factions in this House.
    • John had reached the age, however, at which he began to question authority - not in the treasonous, seditious way Aaron and Andrew once had, but in a more innocent, juvenile way.
    • Can denunciations of the cosmopolitans who corrupt our youth with seditious ideas be far behind?
    • He played the song incessantly, ignoring my pleas for mercy and grannyish objections to its author's seditious intent.
    • He described Thomas Paine as a traitor to his country, a wicked, malicious, seditious and ill-disposed individual, who had actively supported both the American and the French Revolutions.
    • Twelve leaders were framed in 1916 on a charge of seditious conspiracy as a result of their campaign of direct action against the war effort.
    • Sometimes the humble person who has helped a disguised king fears the worst when the latter's identity is revealed - has he behaved disrespectfully, or said anything seditious or incriminating?
    Synonyms
    rabble-rousing, inciting, agitating, fomenting, troublemaking, provocative, inflammatory, agitational
    revolutionary, rebellious, insurrectionist, mutinous, insurgent, subversive, insubordinate, civil disobedience, dissident, defiant, disloyal, treasonous

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French seditieux or Latin seditiosus, from seditio ‘mutinous separation’ (see sedition).

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