monarchs in English

noun
1
a sovereign head of state, especially a king, queen, or emperor.
Since then I have described the Queen as our monarch or sovereign, and the governor-general as our head of state.

Use "monarchs" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "monarchs" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "monarchs", or refer to the context using the word "monarchs" in the English Dictionary.

1. Other grandchildren became monarchs in their own right or consorts.

2. Mithridates was the first son of Roman Client Monarchs Aspurgus and Gepaepyris.

3. The fringe is golden as other foreign monarchs and British Royal Family members.

4. English monarchs periodically had to dicker with its wealthier subjects for financial resources.

5. The United Arab Emirates consists of seven emirates that are all ruled by absolute monarchs.

6. 15 Tudor monarchs ruled from Henry VII to Elizabeth I (from 1485 to 160.

7. The Throne Room gives access to the balcony where the Danish monarchs are proclaimed.

8. Twenty-seven monarchs ruled over a united Korean Peninsula for more than 500 years.

9. Cupbearer, an officer of high rank with Egyptian, Persian and Assyrian as well as Jewish monarchs

10. Synonyms for Athelings include kings, rulers, emperors, monarchs, sovereigns, crowns, lords, majesties, princes and head

11. A kingdom for a stage, princes to act and monarchs to behold the swelling scene.

12. Unlike most kingdoms, monarchs of Augeas are not determined by lineage, but by the Sky God Kanu himself

13. The professor said he has no idea if Ayi is a direct descendant of other Glidji monarchs.

14. The Czars ruled as absolute monarchs (see absolute monarchy) until the early twentieth century, when a …

15. Originating, existing, or happening during the same period of time: the Contemporaneous reigns of two monarchs.

16. The first to insure their people were the Achaemenian monarchs, and insurance records were submitted to notary offices

17. Portraits of monarchs, warriors and saints, as well as representations of famous battles, have suddenly become omnipresent.

18. It killed an estimated 400,000 Europeans each year in the 18th century, including five reigning European monarchs.

19. Parliamentary democracy was introduced in 1951, but was twice suspended by Nepalese monarchs, in 1960 and 2005.

20. The common denominator in the survival of Ceremonial monarchs is the depoliticization of the function of the head of state

21. Lucy Worsley gets into bed with our past monarchs to uncover the Tales from the Royal Bedchamber

22. The Frankfurt Assembly had no powers to raise taxes and relied completely on the goodwill of the monarchs.

23. He formed the Holy Alliance to suppress revolutionary movements in Europe that he saw as immoral threats to legitimate Christian monarchs.

24. But the great monarchs of the sixteenth century knew very well how to use that adulation to enhance their power.

25. Czar Tsar (; Old Church Slavonic: ц︢рь [usually written thus with a title] or цар, цaрь), also spelled csar, or Czar, is a title used to designate East and South Slavic monarchs or supreme rulers of Eastern Europe, originally Bulgarian monarchs from 10th century onwards.

26. Antiochus° Antiochus °, name of 13 Seleucid monarchs who ruled Syria for the greater part of two and a half centuries

27. Monarchs pretended to close their eyes to it while they shared the loot and then honored the pirate heroes.

28. At first, they served the Mongol monarchs as auxiliaries in battle after the Mongol invasion of Volga Bulgaria in 1236.

29. Host Lucy Worsley gets into bed with Britain’s past monarchs to uncover the secrets and history of the royal Bedchamber

30. For guidance on the use of Cognomens or other titles for monarchs and nobles, see the royalty and nobility guideline

31. Sergeans d'armes) of monarchs, the servientes (sergeans) who were the Apparitors of the French king, and vassals who held by

32. Synonyms: Autocrator, despot, dictator, monarch, tyrant, strongman; A title borne by some such monarchs, as in Byzantium and tsarist Russia

33. After turning back deep Muslim incursions, the Frankish Empire under the Carolingian monarchs, created the Marches of Gothia and Hispania progressively.

34. Antiochus Antiochus °, name of 13 Seleucid monarchs who ruled Syria for the greater part of two and a half centuries.

35. In 1824 Mexico’s adoption of a federal system represented a break from centuries of Centralist rule under a succession of Spanish monarchs

36. The Churches and the sects had devastated Europe, engineered massacres, demanded religious resistance or revolution, attempted to excommunicate or to depose monarchs.”

37. Streets and monuments named after Colonialists and British monarchs can be found throughout Uganda, a former British colony, according to campaigners, who say …

38. The avuncular Custodian of the Holy Places, as Saudi monarchs title themselves, had a reputation for probity, tolerance and humility that augured change for the better.

39. Give up, such as power, as of monarchs and emperors, or duties and obligations Familiarity information: Abdicate used as a verb is very rare.

40. The Greco-Bactrian kingdom refers to several dynasties and probably kingdoms of Greco-Macedonian monarchs who ruled over Bactria from 250 to 130 BCE.

41. Frederick William told the delegation that he felt honoured but could only accept the crown with the consent of his peers, the other sovereign monarchs and free cities.

42. The octagonal shape of monarchs' tombs of this age and the celestial maps drawn in the Kitora and Takamatsuzuka kofun also reflect the Taoist cosmology.

43. The Avuncular Custodian of the Holy Places, as Saudi monarchs title themselves, had a reputation for probity, tolerance and humility that augured change for the better

44. As part of my job, I spend a lot of time in the greenhouse growing plants, and the reason for this is that monarchs are extremely picky eaters.

45. Like most Asters it blooms late in the season and provides a critical fall nectar source for pollinators, especially Monarchs as they stock up for their fall migration to Mexico

46. The Banqueting House in London is the only surviving building of the eminent 16th century royal Palace of Whitehall, home to some of Britain’s most infamous monarchs

47. A 'sponsored' activity, an activity that for all its tacitly corrective and Admonitory content seems to have been entirely congenial to male monarchs and to the whole …

48. Antiochus (221-193 BC) was a Seleucid prince, first-born child to the Seleucid monarchs Antiochus III the Great and Laodice III, and his father's first heir

49. “The Adroitness and patience of a long line of monarchs and royal ministers, who moved gradually but steadily to centralize both authority and power in their own …

50. Moreover, like his father, Edward was very devoted to his wife and was faithful to her throughout their married lives — a rarity among monarchs of the time.