English to Arabic Dictionary insurgent

insurgent

متمرد
definition
noun
an attack by armed insurgents
a rebel or revolutionary.
adjective
alleged links with insurgent groups
rising in active revolt.
translation of 'insurgent'
noun
عاص,
متمرد,
ثائر
adjective
عاص,
متمرد
example
The 'insurgent' terrorists have launched a day of mayhem.
The worst times have seen 90 'insurgent' attacks every 24 hours.
In response, the British colonial rulers conspired with the leaders of the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League to divide the 'insurgent' masses on a communal basis.
The most foreboding of these trends involves 'insurgent' and terrorist groups who fund their ideological agendas with drug money.
In Malaya the British defeated an 'insurgent' communist movement.
It's a situation where the 'insurgent' forces have to try to start a civil war and break up the different factions more so than they are now.
He has previous experience in helping the labor bureaucracy ward off an 'insurgent' rank and file.
A revised Plan Colombia must be directed toward substantive, flexible, and pragmatic peace negotiations with the 'insurgent' groups.
the 'insurgent' stronghold
A cancer cell is like an 'insurgent' terrorist with a very well-defined agenda.
There have been few 'insurgent' attacks against his troops.
According to the report his camera contained footage of an 'insurgent' attack on American forces.
That was followed by a very bloody year and growing 'insurgent' attacks.
It was not difficult for the local population to differentiate between these constructive efforts and the often brutal, terroristic actions of 'insurgent' forces.
To combat an 'insurgent' force of between 3,000 and 6,000, British forces embarked on a brutal war.
But the turning point of the film, the Warsaw Ghetto uprising where 40,000 'insurgent' Jews held off the Nazis for almost a month with few weapons, is watched from a distance.
Resistance fighters have frequently targeted foreign planes in the area, which is an 'insurgent' stronghold.
The were first formed in the sixties to protect against cold war menaces and 'insurgent' forces such as the terrorist organization known as the London Underground.
The higher than expected cost of protecting workers against 'insurgent' attacks - about 25 cents of every reconstruction dollar now pays for security - has sent the cost of projects skyward.
Access to, and influence over, civilian populations is a source of strength for 'insurgent' movements and arguably terrorist networks.
Elsewhere in the article an anonymous diplomat says the U.S. has a newfound willingness to negotiate with 'insurgent' groups, a risky but potentially fruitful concession.
U.S. troops faces escalating 'insurgent' attacks.
Taking a page out of the tactics of Anglo-American imperialism in Italy, the Stalinist bureaucracy leaves the 'insurgent' proletariat to be crushed by the retreating Nazis.
So if they can thwart it through terrorist and 'insurgent' violence, they think they'll get a victory.
They recognize a lot of policemen who are on the front line are bearing the brunt of 'insurgent' attacks, that when suicide bombs go off, they are often at checkpoints.
In October of this year, there were 3,100 'insurgent' attacks.
This process of fission may then spread beyond the borders of the state itself, as refugee populations flee across the border, and as 'insurgent' groups use frontier zones for their base camps.
For example, in two communications, one targeting potential 'insurgent' recruits and one active guerrillas, both should discourage resistance.
As for insurgents from other countries, the reports I've read said they constitute about 10 percent of the 'insurgent' forces.
A senior U.S. military official says, since the election, 'insurgent' attacks are down 22 percent.
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