renegade 英 [ˈrenɪgeɪd]   美 [ˈrɛnɪˌɡed]

renegade

renegade  英 [ˈrenɪgeɪd] 美 [ˈrɛnɪˌɡed]

n. 叛徒;变节者;脱党者  vi. 背叛;脱离  adj. 叛徒的;背弃的;脱离的 

名词复数:renegades 

But the stance of aggressive unoriginality is still evident in The Proletarian Revolution and the renegade Kautsky, written in late 1918. 但是在引 用时咄咄逼人的姿态仍然可以在1918年的《无产阶级革命与叛徒考茨基》中清晰可见。
"Although it is primarily to deal with renegade aircraft, there is nothing to prevent it being used in search and rescue/emergency situations, too," he added. 他补充说,“虽然它主要是处理叛徒的飞机,但是没有什么可以阻止它也会被用于搜索和救援/紧急情况下。”

  • A renegade is a person who has deserted their cause or defied convention; they're rebels and sometimes outlaws, or even traitors.
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  • n. 叛徒;变节者;脱党者
  • vi. 背叛;脱离
  • adj. 叛徒的;背弃的;脱离的
  • 1. But the stance of aggressive unoriginality is still evident in The Proletarian Revolution and the renegade Kautsky, written in late 1918.

    但是在引 用时咄咄逼人的姿态仍然可以在1918年的《无产阶级革命与叛徒考茨基》中清晰可见。

  • 2. "Although it is primarily to deal with renegade aircraft, there is nothing to prevent it being used in search and rescue/emergency situations, too," he added.

    他补充说,“虽然它主要是处理叛徒的飞机,但是没有什么可以阻止它也会被用于搜索和救援/紧急情况下。”

  • renegade (n.) 1580s, "apostate," probably (with change of suffix) from Spanish renegado, originally "Christian turned Muslim," from Medieval Latin renegatus, noun use of past participle of renegare "deny" (see renege). General sense of "turncoat" is from 1660s. The form renegate, directly from Medieval Latin, is attested in English from late 14c. As an adjective from 1705.
rene·gade / ˈrenɪɡeɪd ; NAmE ˈrenɪɡeɪd / noun ( formal, disapproving) 1 ( often used as an adjective 常用作形容词 ) a person who leaves one political, religious, etc. group to join another that has very different views 变节者;叛徒;背叛者;叛教者 2 a person who opposes and lives outside a group or society that they used to belong to 叛逆者 SYN outlaw renegade renegades renegaded renegading rene·gade / ˈrenɪɡeɪd ; NAmE ˈrenɪɡeɪd /
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