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4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
rev·o·lu·tion
/ˌrɛvəˈluʃən/
革命,變革;旋轉,運轉,公轉;週期
From:
Network Terminology
revolution
革命
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Rev·o·lu·tion
n.
1.
The
act
of
revolving
,
or
turning
round
on
an
axis
or
a
center
;
the
motion
of
a
body
round
a
fixed
point
or
line
;
rotation
;
as
,
the
revolution
of
a
wheel
,
of
a
top
,
of
the
earth
on
its
axis
,
etc
.
2.
Return
to
a
point
before
occupied
,
or
to
a
point
relatively
the
same
;
a
rolling
back
;
return
;
as
,
revolution
in
an
ellipse
or
spiral
.
That
fear
Comes
thundering
back
,
with
dreadful
revolution
,
On
my
defenseless
head
. --
Milton
.
3.
The
space
measured
by
the
regular
return
of
a
revolving
body
;
the
period
made
by
the
regular
recurrence
of
a
measure
of
time
,
or
by
a
succession
of
similar
events
.
“The
short
revolution
of
a
day.”
4.
Astron.
The
motion
of
any
body
,
as
a
planet
or
satellite
,
in
a
curved
line
or
orbit
,
until
it
returns
to
the
same
point
again
,
or
to
a
point
relatively
the
same
; --
designated
as
the
annual
,
anomalistic
,
nodical
,
sidereal
,
or
tropical
revolution
,
according
as
the
point
of
return
or
completion
has
a
fixed
relation
to
the
year
,
the
anomaly
,
the
nodes
,
the
stars
,
or
the
tropics
;
as
,
the
revolution
of
the
earth
about
the
sun
;
the
revolution
of
the
moon
about
the
earth
.
Note:
☞
The
term
is
sometimes
applied
in
astronomy
to
the
motion
of
a
single
body
,
as
a
planet
,
about
its
own
axis
,
but
this
motion
is
usually
called
rotation
.
5.
Geom.
The
motion
of
a
point
,
line
,
or
surface
about
a
point
or
line
as
its
center
or
axis
,
in
such
a
manner
that
a
moving
point
generates
a
curve
,
a
moving
line
a
surface
(
called
a
surface
of
revolution
),
and
a
moving
surface
a
solid
(
called
a
solid
of
revolution
);
as
,
the
revolution
of
a
right-angled
triangle
about
one
of
its
sides
generates
a
cone
;
the
revolution
of
a
semicircle
about
the
diameter
generates
a
sphere
.
6.
A
total
or
radical
change
;
as
,
a
revolution
in
one's
circumstances
or
way
of
living
.
The
ability
. . .
of
the
great
philosopher
speedily
produced
a
complete
revolution
throughout
the
department
.
--
Macaulay
.
7.
Politics
A
fundamental
change
in
political
organization
,
or
in
a
government
or
constitution
;
the
overthrow
or
renunciation
of
one
government
,
and
the
substitution
of
another
,
by
the
governed
.
The
violence
of
revolutions
is
generally
proportioned
to
the
degree
of
the
maladministration
which
has
produced
them
.
--
Macaulay
.
Note:
☞
When
used
without
qualifying
terms
,
the
word
is
often
applied
specifically
,
by
way
of
eminence
,
to
: (
a
)
The
English
Revolution
in
1689,
when
William
of
Orange
and
Mary
became
the
reigning
sovereigns
,
in
place
of
James
II
. (
b
)
The
American
Revolution
,
beginning
in
1775,
by
which
the
English
colonies
,
since
known
as
the
United
States
,
secured
their
independence
. (
c
)
The
revolution
in
France
in
1789,
commonly
called
the
French
Revolution
,
the
subsequent
revolutions
in
that
country
being
designated
by
their
dates
,
as
the
Revolution
of
1830,
of
1848,
etc
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
revolution
n
1:
a
drastic
and
far-reaching
change
in
ways
of
thinking
and
behaving
; "
the
industrial
revolution
was
also
a
cultural
revolution
"
2:
the
overthrow
of
a
government
by
those
who
are
governed
3:
a
single
complete
turn
(
axial
or
orbital
); "
the
plane
made
three
rotations
before
it
crashed
"; "
the
revolution
of
the
earth
about
the
sun
takes
one
year
" [
syn
:
rotation
,
gyration
]
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