| jacobin | 1. A Dominican friar; so named because, before the French Revolution, that order had a convent in the Rue St. Jacques, Paris. 2. One of a society of violent agitators in France, during the revolution of 1789, who held secret meetings in the Jacobin convent in the Rue St. Jacques, Paris, and concerted measures to control the proceedings of the National Assembly. Hence: A plotter against an existing government; a turbulent demagogue. 3. <zoology> A fancy pigeon, in which the feathers of the neck form a hood, whence the name. The wings and tail are long, and the beak moderately short. Origin: F. See Jack, Jacobite. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| jacobine |
a poisonous pyrrolizidine alkaloid from the composite-flowered plant Senecio jacobae; it causes seneciosis in ruminants.
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| jacobin | a member of the radical movement that instituted the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution |
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| jacobin | of or relating to the Jacobins of the French Revolution |
| jacobin | of or relating to the Jacobins of the French Revolution |
| jacobin | the ideology of the most radical element of the French Revolution that instituted the Reign of Terror |
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