republican

listen to the pronunciation of republican
الإنجليزية - التركية
cumhuriyetçi

Cumhuriyetçi liderler suçlamayı reddetti. - Republican leaders denied the charge.

Cumhuriyetçiler çok kızgındı. - Republicans were furious.

cumhuriyete ait
i., A.B.D. Cumhuriyetçi, Cumhuriyetçi Parti üyesi/taraftarı. s., A.B.D. Cumhuriyetçi
{i} cumhuriyetçi parti üyesi
(sıfat) cumhuriyetçi
cumhuriyet perver
republican people's party
cumhuriyet halk partisi
Republican regime
Cumhuriyet rejimi
early republican period
erken cumhuriyet dönemi
republicanism
cumhuriyetçilik
republicans
cumhuriyetçiler
republicanism
(isim) cumhuriyetçilik
the Republican Party
A.B.D. Cumhuriyetçi Parti
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
A member or supporter of the Republican Party of the United States, currently the more right-wing of the two main political parties
An Irish nationalist; a proponent of a united Ireland
A supporter of the government or left-wing side in the Spanish Civil War
Of or belonging to a republic
Someone who favors social equality and opposes aristocracy and privilege

Sir, there is one Mrs Macaulay in this town, a great republican. One day when I was at her house, I put on a very grave countenance, and said to her, 'Madam, I am now become a convert to your way of thinking. I am convinced that all mankind are upon an equal footing...' (Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, 1791). Travels of a Republican Radical in Search of Hot Water - Title of a collection of essays published by the leftwing novelist H. G. Wells in 1939.

Someone who favors a republic; an anti-monarchist
Favouring a republic
{n} a favor of a commonwealth
{a} placing government in the people
A member or supporter of the Republican Party, generally the more right-wing of the two main political parties
A supporter of the more militant or radical wing of Irish nationalism; a proponent of a united Ireland
A supporter of the government side or left-wing side in the Spanish Civil War
A South African weaver bird (Philetærus socius)
Someone who favours a republic; an anti-monarchist
{i} supporter of a republican system of government, one who favors a government in which citizens elect their representatives
a tributary of the Kansas River that flows from eastern Colorado eastward through Nebraska and Kansas an advocate of a republic (usually in opposition to a monarchy) having the supreme power lying in the body of citizens entitled to vote for officers and representatives responsible to them or characteristic of such government; "the United States shall guarantee to every state in this union a republican form of government"- United States Constitution; "a very republican notion"; "so little republican and so much aristocratic sentiment"- Philip Marsh; "our republican and artistic simplicity"-Nathaniel Hawthorne relating to or belonging to the Republican Party; "a Republican senator"; "Republican party politics
a tributary of the Kansas River that flows from eastern Colorado eastward through Nebraska and Kansas
relating to or belonging to the Republican Party; "a Republican senator"; "Republican party politics"
Catholic nationalists whose aims are a united Ireland and the end of British rule and occupation in Northern Ireland
Consonant with the principles of a republic; as, republican sentiments or opinions; republican manners
A political party that stresses less government involvement
an advocate of a republic (usually in opposition to a monarchy)
Indicates support for a form of government, a republic, in which the people, as a body of citizens, are the font of authority and choose those who will represent them in government through elections In the context of Eureka, this also had the implication of setting up a form of goverment that was independent of the British monarchy
Someone who believes that Ulster should be part of the Republic of Ireland
The cliff swallows build their nests side by side, many together
In Northern Ireland, if someone is Republican, they believe that Northern Ireland should not be ruled by Britain but should become part of the Republic of Ireland. a Republican paramilitary group. A Republican is someone who has Republican views. a Northern Ireland republican. relating to or supporting a system of government that is not led by a king or queen democratic. French republican calendar Irish Republican Army National Republican Party Popular Republican Movement Radical Republican Republican Party Republican River
{s} pertaining to the characteristics of a republic; supporting a republican form of government, favoring a government in which citizens elect their representatives
One who favors or prefers a republican form of government
Of or pertaining to a republic
Republican means relating to a republic. In republican systems of government, power is held by the people or the representatives that they elect. the nations that had adopted the republican form of government
a Pertaining to a republic; consisting of a commonwealth; as a republican constitution or government
In the United States, if someone is Republican, they belong to or support the Republican Party. Republican voters Some families have been republican for generations. A Republican is someone who supports or belongs to the Republican Party. What made you decide to become a Republican?
having the supreme power lying in the body of citizens entitled to vote for officers and representatives responsible to them or characteristic of such government; "the United States shall guarantee to every state in this union a republican form of government"- United States Constitution; "a very republican notion"; "so little republican and so much aristocratic sentiment"- Philip Marsh; "our republican and artistic simplicity"-Nathaniel Hawthorne
These weaver birds build many nests together, under a large rooflike shelter, which they make of straw
The American cliff swallow
a member of the Republican Party
Someone who favours social equality and opposes aristocracy and privilege
Republican Marriage
Alternative spelling of republican marriage
Republican Party
The more conservative of two main political parties in the United States of America
republican marriage
A form of human execution used during the French Revolution in which a man and woman were tied together naked, exposed to public view for a time in this condition, and then stabbed, shot, or thrown into a body of water to drown

A Revolutionary Tribunal was established , of which Carrier was the presiding demon—Carrier, known in all nations as the inventor of that last of barbarous atrocities, the Republican Marriage, in which two persons of different sexes, generally an old man and an old woman, or a young man and a young woman, bereft of every kind of clothing, were bound together before the multitude, exposed in a boat in that situation for half an hour or more, and then thrown into the river.

republican marriages
plural form of republican marriage
Republican Guard
special Iraqi military unit responsible for the safety of president Saddam Hussein and his entourage
Republican National Convention
convention of the Republican party which is held every fours years for the purpose of nominating the party's candidates for President and Vice President
Republican Party
one of the two largest U.S. political parties (more conservative of the two)
Republican Party
The Republican Party is one of the two main political parties in the United States. It is more right-wing or conservative than the Democratic Party. the Republican Party one of the two main political parties in the US Democratic Party. or GOP (Grand Old Party) One of two major U.S. political parties. It was formed in 1854 by former members of the Whig, Democratic, and Free Soil parties who chose the party's name to recall the Jeffersonian Republicans' concern with the national interest above sectional interests and states' rights. The new party opposed slavery and its extension into the territories, as provided by the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Its first presidential candidate, John C. Frémont, won 11 states in 1856; its second, Abraham Lincoln, won the 1860 election by carrying 18 states. Its association with the Union victory in the American Civil War allowed it a long period of dominance nationally, though it was uncompetitive in the South for more than a century after the war. Republican candidates won 14 of 18 presidential elections between 1860 and 1932, through support from an alliance of Northern and Midwestern farmers and big-business interests. In 1912 the party split between a progressive wing led by Theodore Roosevelt and a conservative wing led by Pres. William Howard Taft; the rift enabled the Democratic candidate, Woodrow Wilson, to win that year's election. The Republican Party's inability to counter the impact of the Great Depression led to its ouster from power in 1933; in 1953 the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower brought a moderate wing of the party to prominence. The party's platform remained conservative, emphasizing anticommunism, reduced government regulation of the economy, and lower taxes; many members also opposed civil rights legislation. In the 1950s the GOP gained new support from middle-class suburbanites and white Southerners disturbed by the integrationist policies of the national Democratic Party. Richard Nixon, who narrowly lost the 1960 presidential race, won narrowly in 1968 and by a landslide in 1972, but he was forced to resign in 1974 as a result of the Watergate scandal. Ronald Reagan, who had assumed the leadership of the conservative wing of the Republican Party after Barry Goldwater's defeat in the presidential election of 1964, won the presidency in 1980 and 1984; he introduced deep tax cuts and launched a massive buildup of U.S. military forces. Reagan's vice president, George Bush, was elected in 1988 and enjoyed enormous popularity after success in the First Persian Gulf War, but an anemic economy led to his defeat in 1992 by Democrat Bill Clinton. The defeat was offset in 1994, when the Republicans regained control of the House of Representatives for the first time in 40 years. In 2000 George W. Bush narrowly won the presidency in one of the closest and most controversial elections in U.S. history. In 2004 he won reelection. The party continues to emphasize tax cuts, traditional social values, and strong national defense
Republican River
A river, about 676 km (420 mi) long, rising in eastern Colorado and flowing northeast and east across southern Nebraska then southeast through northeast-central Kansas, where it joins the Smoky Hill River to form the Kansas River. River, central U.S. Rising in eastern Colorado, it is 422 mi (679 km) long. It flows northeast and east through southern Nebraska, then southeast through northeastern central Kansas to unite with the Smoky Hill River at Junction City and form the Kansas River. It is part of the Missouri River Basin flood-control and land-reclamation project
Republican frontrunner
candidate that is currently leading a race for nomination by the Republican party (Politics)
republican guard
Iraq's elite military unit whose primary role is to protect the government in Baghdad
republican party
the younger of two major political parties in the United States; GOP is an acronym for grand old party
Brezhnev Republican
a member of the Republican party whose policies resemble those of the Soviet Union under Leonid Brezhnev
Goldwater Republican
A member of the Republican Party whose policies resemble those of the late Arizona senator Barry Goldwater. These policies include the smallest government possible at the federal level, as well as social libertarianism, in contrast to the Moral Majority

A lot of people who think of themselves as Goldwater Republicans do not know what it really means to be a Goldwater Republican, said Tom Paniccia, a former Air Force sergeant who was discharged from the military last year after he had proclaimed his homosexuality. He has always had a near libertarian stance on keeping government out of people's lives..

Irish Republican Army
Any of several Irish guerrilla or terrorist organisations fighting British rule in Ireland (later Northern Ireland) since the early 20th century
Republican.
R
Republicans
The Republican Party, the more right-wing of the two main political parties in the US
Republicans
plural form of Republican
Rockefeller Republican
a member of the Republican Party of the United States of America, who is fiscally conservative, but not Christian conservative, and politically ambiguous on social conservatism
republicanism
The advocacy of a republic as a means of government
small "r" republican
Alternative spelling of small-r republican
small r republican
Alternative spelling of small-r republican
small-r republican
A republican, that is, a person who favors a republic, who is not a member of their country's "Republican Party"
republicanism
{n} a system of republican government, attachment to that system
French Republican Calendar
{i} Revolutionary calendar, calendar adopted by the French in 1793 during the French Revolution and given up in 1805, calendar which had 12 months of 30 days and each month comprised of three 10 day weeks (the months were given names that hinted to nature and season weather)
French republican calendar
Dating system adopted in 1793 during the French Revolution. It sought to replace the Gregorian calendar with a scientific and rational system that avoided Christian associations. The 12 months each contained three décades (instead of weeks) of 10 days each, and the year ended with five (six in leap years) supplementary days. The year began with the autumnal equinox and the day on which the National Convention had proclaimed France a republic, 1 Vendémiaire, Year I (Sept. 22, 1792). The other autumn months were named Brumaire and Frimaire; they were followed by the winter months Nivôse, Pluviôse, and Ventôse, the spring months Germinal, Floréal, and Prairial, and the summer months Messidor, Thermidor, and Fructidor. (All the names were derived from words for natural phenomena.) On Jan. 1, 1806, the Gregorian calendar was reestablished by the Napoleonic regime
Irish Republican Army
the full name of the IRA. Republican paramilitary organization, founded in 1919, seeking the end of British rule in Northern Ireland and the unification of the province with the republic of Ireland. The IRA used armed force to achieve the same objectives as Sinn Féin, though the two always operated independently. After the establishment of the Irish Free State (1922), the IRA refused to accept a separate Northern Ireland, and the violence continued. The IRA was declared illegal in 1931, and the Irish legislature provided for internment without trial for its members. It gained popular support in the 1960s when Catholics in Northern Ireland began a civil rights campaign against discrimination by the dominant Protestant majority. In 1969 the IRA split into the Marxist Official wing, which eschewed violence, and the Provisionals (Provos), Ulster Catholics committed to the use of terror tactics against Ulster Protestants and the British military, tactics that included the 1979 assassination of Lord Mountbatten and the killing of more than 3,000 people. In 1994 the IRA declared a cease-fire, and its political representatives were included in multiparty talks beginning in 1997. Negotiations produced the Good Friday Agreement, in which the IRA agreed to decommission its weapons (disarm). In 2000 the IRA agreed to allow international inspections of its weapons as a first step in the process of putting them "beyond use," though it continued to resist decommissioning
Irish Republican Army
radical Irish nationalist organization devoted to the integration of Ireland, Catholic resistance fighting for the unity of northern Ireland and Ireland (I.R.A)
National Republican Party
U.S. political party formed after the Jeffersonian Republicans split in 1825. The National Republicans included followers of John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay and opponents of Andrew Jackson. Adams, the incumbent president, ran as the party's unsuccessful candidate in the 1828 presidential election. Its 1832 presidential nominee was Clay, whose platform endorsing a high tariff, internal improvements, and the Bank of the United States (see Bank War). After losing again to Jackson, the party joined with conservatives and other anti-Jackson forces to form the Whig Party
Popular Republican Movement
French social reform party. Founded in 1944, the MRP was a strong centre party of the Fourth Republic and the French expression of Christian Democracy. After winning about 25% of the vote, it declined in the 1950s, losing strength to both right and left factions. In 1966 it was merged with other right-centre parties to become the Centre Démocrate, which won only 13% of the vote. By 1968 it had become little more than a political club
Radical Republican
Member of the Republican Party in the 1860s committed to the emancipation of slaves and the equal treatment and enfranchisment of blacks. Zealous antislavery advocates in the Congress pressed Pres. Abraham Lincoln to include emancipation as a war aim. They later opposed his policy of lenient Reconstruction of the South under presidential control and passed harsher measures in the Wade-Davis Bill. After Lincoln's death the Radicals supported Pres. Andrew Johnson but soon demanded congressional control of Reconstruction. Johnson's attempt to break the Radicals' power led them to pass the Tenure of Office Act; his challenge of the act led to his impeachment. Radical Republican leaders included Henry Winter Davis (1817-65), Thaddeus Stevens, Charles Sumner, and Benjamin Butler. Their influence waned as white control over Southern governments gradually returned in the 1870s
continuity irish republican army
a terrorist organization formed in Ireland in 1994 as a clandestine armed wing of Sinn Fein
democratic-republican party
a former major political party in the United States in the early 19th century; opposed the old Federalist party; favored a strict interpretation of the constitution in order to limit the powers of the federal government
irish republican army
a militant organization of Irish nationalists who used terrorism and guerilla warfare in an effort to drive British forces from Northern Ireland and achieve a united independent Ireland
republicanism
The principles and policy of the Republican party, so called the political orientation of those who hold that a republic is the best form of government
republicanism
the political orientation of those who hold that a republic is the best form of government
republicanism
Republicanism is support for or membership of the Republican Party in the United States
republicanism
{i} government in which citizens elect their representatives; principals of the republican system of government
republicanism
Attachment to, or political sympathy for, a republican form of government
republicanism
Republicanism is the belief that the best system of government is a republic
republicanism
A republican form or system of government; the principles or theory of republican government
republicans
plural of republican
republicans
(See Black )
republicans
A political party founded by James Madison and Thomas Jefferson to combat Alexander Hamilton's fiscal policies Socialism A political and economic theory according to which land, transport, chief industries, natural resources are managed by the State, or by public bodies in the interests of the community as a whole
republican

    الواصلة

    re·pub·li·can

    التركية النطق

    ripʌblıkın

    النطق

    /rēˈpəbləkən/ /riːˈpʌbləkən/

    فيديوهات

    ... together and get the job done and could not care less if it's a Republican or a Democrat. ...
    ... was to push through a plan without a single Republican vote. As a matter of fact, when ...
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