We have no meanings for "become mutinous" in our records yet.
1 The liabilities have become mutinous and bear down upon him in a threatening mob.
2 You're probably still up there because the queue at passport control has become mutinous .
3 This was done to satisfy the men, who had become mutinous because they were not permitted to stop at Cincinnati on their way hither.
4 Toledo's army, debarred from the sack of Haarlem, became mutinous through lack of pay.
5 Afterwards his sailors became mutinous , and set Hendrik and his son, with seven infirm sailors, afloat.
6 His men, weary of their hardships, became mutinous .
7 The diary states that in the night the inhabitants of Liège became mutinous and that fifty persons were shot.
8 The city was becoming mutinous .
9 Here, in a state of inaction, they became mutinous , and were plotting to deliver up their commander to the enemy.
10 The soldiers became mutinous .
11 During a winter in the War of 1812, General Jackson's troops, unprovided for and starving, became mutinous and were going home.
12 Half starved, wasted by sickness and hardships of all kinds, with bleeding feet and torn clothes, some of them became mutinous .
13 After these things the allies moved to Dehli; but the Daurani troops became mutinous and quarrelsome; and they parted on ill terms.
14 After being long friendly to us, disturbances had arisen among them; the army became mutinous and demanded to be led against the British.
15 I know that, already, your soldiery are becoming mutinous at being thus kept, for months, away from their country, and receiving no pay.
16 But the Prætorians, becoming mutinous , not only put the murderers of Domitian to death, but forced the emperor to approve of their act publicly.
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