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  1. reform
    a change for the better as a result of correcting abuses
    The Mexican Revolution was a process of social and political reform initiated against the corrupt, authoritarian regime of President Porfirio Diaz (1884–1911).
  2. initiate
    set in motion, start an event or prepare the way for
    The Mexican Revolution was a process of social and political reform initiated against the corrupt, authoritarian regime of President Porfirio Diaz (1884–1911).
  3. authoritarian
    characteristic of an absolute ruler or absolute rule
    The Mexican Revolution was a process of social and political reform initiated against the corrupt, authoritarian regime of President Porfirio Diaz (1884–1911).
  4. regime
    the governing authority of a political unit
    The Mexican Revolution was a process of social and political reform initiated against the corrupt, authoritarian regime of President Porfirio Diaz (1884–1911).
  5. revolution
    the overthrow of a government by those who are governed
    In the early phases, the revolution was a popular, armed, nationalist struggle led by Emiliano Zapata and Pancho Villa.
  6. peasant
    one of a class of agricultural laborers
    The chief supporters were urban workers, peasants, women, and Amerindians who opposed dictatorship and neocolonialism.
  7. dictatorship
    a form of government in which the ruler is unconstrained
    The chief supporters were urban workers, peasants, women, and Amerindians who opposed dictatorship and neocolonialism.
  8. neocolonialism
    control by a powerful country of less developed countries
    The chief supporters were urban workers, peasants, women, and Amerindians who opposed dictatorship and neocolonialism.
  9. secularization
    removal of religion as a control or influence over something
    The Mexican Revolution was enshrined in the 1917 Constitution, which promised land reform, workers’ rights, limits to foreign ownership, and secularization.
  10. pivotal
    being of crucial importance
    The dominance of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) was pivotal in securing concrete, permanent reforms.
  11. setback
    an unfortunate happening that thwarts or hinders
    After three years of repeated military setbacks in World War I, a strike and soldier mutiny in St. Petersburg led to the Russian Revolution of 1917.
  12. mutiny
    open rebellion against constituted authority
    After three years of repeated military setbacks in World War I, a strike and soldier mutiny in St. Petersburg led to the Russian Revolution of 1917.
  13. provisional
    under terms not final or fully worked out or agreed upon
    A provisional government replaced the czar, but Russia remained in the war and German armies continued to inflict heavy losses.
  14. czar
    a male monarch or emperor
    A provisional government replaced the czar, but Russia remained in the war and German armies continued to inflict heavy losses.
  15. communist
    relating to socialism that abolishes private ownership
    Later in the year, the Bolsheviks, a communist workers party, seized power (the October Revolution).
  16. deploy
    place troops or weapons in battle formation
    Russian armed forces were reorganized as the Red Army and redeployed to defend the new government against the White Army (a loose organization of anticommunist forces supported by foreign democracies) and spread communist ideology more widely in Russian society.
  17. ideology
    an orientation that characterizes the thinking of a group
    Russian armed forces were reorganized as the Red Army and redeployed to defend the new government against the White Army (a loose organization of anticommunist forces supported by foreign democracies) and spread communist ideology more widely in Russian society.
  18. successor
    a person who inherits some title or office
    His successor, Josef Stalin, adapted communism to nationalism, constructing an ever-more authoritarian regime in the years following Lenin’s death.
  19. communism
    a form of socialism that abolishes private ownership
    His successor, Josef Stalin, adapted communism to nationalism, constructing an ever-more authoritarian regime in the years following Lenin’s death.
  20. conduct
    direct the course of; manage or control
    Stalin used secret police to conduct campaigns of mass execution that targeted ethnic minority groups, kulaks, and other perceived opponents of the regime.
  21. capital
    assets available for use in the production of further assets
    Stalin’s multiple Five-Year Plans successfully industrialized Russia without dependence on foreign capital.
  22. Marxism
    theory that capitalism will be superseded by communism
    In the 1920s, the Chinese Communist Party adapted Marxism–Leninism to the needs of an agrarian society, recruiting peasants to serve in militias and promoting land-redistribution policies.
  23. agrarian
    relating to rural matters
    In the 1920s, the Chinese Communist Party adapted Marxism–Leninism to the needs of an agrarian society, recruiting peasants to serve in militias and promoting land-redistribution policies.
  24. militia
    civilians trained as soldiers, not part of the regular army
    In the 1920s, the Chinese Communist Party adapted Marxism–Leninism to the needs of an agrarian society, recruiting peasants to serve in militias and promoting land-redistribution policies.
  25. purge
    oust politically
    When these programs failed to meet stated goals, Mao launched the Cultural Revolution to further purge political opponents and centralize his power.
Created on Wed Jun 19 16:38:28 EDT 2019 (updated Wed Jun 19 16:50:51 EDT 2019)

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