Few actors bolt out of the gate with as much bolshie career promise as Ed Norton.
From the independent.co.uk
That could well embolden rebels in what is an increasingly bolshie parliament.
From the economist.com
He is bolshie, and totally committed to his clients and maybe even himself.
From the nzherald.co.nz
In the 1970s its bolshie workforce frequently clashed with tetchy managers.
From the economist.com
The French have always had a bolshie streak, and blue has been its colour.
From the independent.co.uk
Even the most bolshie of us, who shied at the merest whiff of organisation, succumbed.
From the newscientist.com
It's no surprise that Shaw's bolshie nonconformity goes back a long way.
From the telegraph.co.uk
It is, however, issues from last year's World Cup that put the regions in a bolshie mood.
From the independent.co.uk
It was a shocking statistic, made all the more so because bolshie dons are not much to blame.
From the economist.com
More examples
Bolshevik: emotionally charged terms used to refer to extreme radicals or revolutionaries
The Bolsheviks, originally also Bolshevists or Bolsheviki (Russian: u0431u043Eu043Bu044Cu0448u0435u0432u0438u043Au0438, u0431u043Eu043Bu044Cu0448u0435u0432u0438u043A (singular); IPA:u00A0; derived from u0431u043Eu043Bu044Cu0448u0438u043Du0441u0442u0432u043E bol'shinstvo, "majority", literally meaning "one of the majority") were a faction of the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) which split apart from the Menshevik faction at the Second Party Congress in 1903...
A government leftist, especially a communist, socialist, or labour union leader; Difficult or rebellious