revolution (n.)
- about-face
 - accommodation
 - adaptation
 - adjustment
 - alteration
 - ambit
 - amelioration
 - anarchism
 - anarchy
 - antinomianism
 - apostasy
 - arsis
 - beat
 - betterment
 - bout
 - bowling
 - break
 - breakup
 - cataclysm
 - centrifugation
 - change
 - changeableness
 - chaos
 - circle
 - circuit
 - circulation
 - circumvolution
 - confusion
 - continuity
 - conversion
 - course
 - crack-up
 - cycle
 - defection
 - degeneration
 - deterioration
 - deviation
 - diastole
 - difference
 - diffusion
 - discontinuity
 - disintegration
 - disorder
 - disorderliness
 - disorganization
 - dispersal
 - disruption
 - dissolution
 - divergence
 - diversification
 - diversion
 - diversity
 - downbeat
 - exfoliation
 - extremism
 - fitting
 - flip-flop
 - fragmentation
 - gyration
 - gyre
 - improvement
 - insurgence
 - insurgency
 - insurrection
 - lap
 - loop
 - melioration
 - meliorism
 - metamorphosis
 - misrule
 - mitigation
 - mobocracy
 - modification
 - modulation
 - mutiny
 - nihilism
 - ochlocracy
 - orbit
 - outbreak
 - overthrow
 - overturn
 - pirouette
 - progressivism
 - pulse
 - putsch
 - qualification
 - radicalism
 - re-creation
 - rebellion
 - reel
 - reform
 - reformation
 - reformism
 - regeneration
 - remaking
 - renewal
 - reorganization
 - reversal
 - revisionism
 - revival
 - revivification
 - revolt
 - riot
 - rising
 - roll
 - rolling
 - rotation
 - round
 - rounds
 - scaling
 - scattering
 - series
 - shake-up
 - shattering
 - shift
 - somersault
 - somerset
 - spell
 - spill
 - spin
 - spinning
 - subversion
 - swinging
 - switch
 - syndicalism
 - systole
 - thesis
 - tour
 - transformation
 - transition
 - trolling
 - turmoil
 - turn
 - turnabout
 - turning
 - turnover
 - twirl
 - unruliness
 - upbeat
 - upheaval
 - uprising
 - upset
 - upturn
 - utopianism
 - variation
 - variety
 - volution
 - walk
 - wheel
 - wheeling
 - whir
 - whirl
 - whirling
 - worsening
 
Equal and exact justice to all men, of whatever state or persuasion, religious or political; peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations,—entangling alliances with none; the support of the State governments in all their rights, as the most competent administrations for our domestic concerns, and the surest bulwarks against anti-republican tendencies; the preservation of the general government in its whole constitutional vigour, as the sheet anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad; . . . . freedom of religion; freedom of the press; freedom of person under the protection of the habeas corpus; and trial by juries impartially selected,—these principles form the bright constellation which has gone before us, and guided our steps through an age of revolution and reformation.