Synonym: chief, emperor, head, king, queen, ruler, sovereign. Similar words: monarchy, anarchy, march, arched, starch, search, parched, research. Meaning: ['mɑnərk /'mɒnək] n. 1. a nation's ruler or head of state usually by hereditary right 2. large migratory American butterfly having deep orange wings with black and white markings; the larvae feed on milkweed.
Random good picture Not show
(31) And, it seemed, the milkweed invited only the monarch to dine on it.
(32) Her ability to keep the notoriously impatient monarch amused was greatly appreciated in royal circles.
(33) Once a bill has received the assent of both Houses it then goes to the monarch for the Royal Assent.
(34) Whether he was more than that, whether he carried weight with the monarch or the Council, was up to him.
(35) The monarch was also entitled, as the fount of Justice, to the profits of his lawcourts.
(36) As with all royal portraits, the choice of artist was approved by the monarch.
(37) Since most other animals avoid milkweed, the monarch caterpillars usually have the leaves all to themselves.
(38) There must therefore have been a certain piquancy for him in now extending hospitality to the fallen monarch.
(39) Premier John Major and the monarch discussed the historic moves during his weekend stay at Balmoral.
(40) It would be headed by the Monarch, followed by the Lord Mayor of London, the aristocracy and church leaders.
(41) The monarch would nevertheless continue to be known as King, regardless of gender.
(42) Buckingham Palace stresses that this is the one and only way to paint a Monarch.
(43) Until the 1890s[Sentencedict.com], the garden was reserved for the exclusive use of either the monarch or selected courtiers.
(44) It was as if Gillray's avaricious monarch was more of an affront than the voluptuary suffering from the horrors of dissipation.
(45) Peers can be appointed by the monarch on the advice of Ministers.
(46) In defending itself so thoroughly against the monarch , the milkweed became inseparable from the butterfly.
(47) Originally the monarch had the power to make laws by means of royal proclamation.
(48) By contrast, Reza Shah ruled as a monarch, proving adept at centralization but not at delegation.
(49) It also lies behind such developments as the medieval conviction that a monarch could heal by the laying on of hands.
(50) By convention[sentencedict.com], the monarch gives the Royal Assent to all legislative measures approved by Parliament.
(51) Payment could be made to the monarch himself or it could be made to the current holder of the office.
(52) Their function was to advise the monarch and if he chose to dispense with their advice, so be it.
(53) For example, the pollen of modified crops had already been shown to be poisonous to monarch butterfly larvae.
(54) The price-conscious monarch could have bought presents for the whole family - and still had change from £50.
(55) The Secretary had in fact become a public officer, no longer merely the personal assistant of the monarch.
(56) Critics could barely keep to the constitutional pretence that the monarch was above political error.
(57) However unattractive King James was as a man and a monarch, he did leave a few noble monuments to grace his reign.
(58) Almost everywhere the monarch was, and was expected to be, the moving force behind the machinery of government.
(59) The exiled monarch had also called for an immediate end to military rule.
(60) Martin Landau dressed as another monarch in a dark suit and tie.
More similar words: monarchy, anarchy, march, arched, starch, search, parched, research, war chest, researcher, oligarchy, patriarch, architect, in search of, patriarchy, narcolepsy, patriarchal, architecture, archeological, dictionary, stationary, missionary, functionary, probationary, revolutionary, dictionary order, snare, porch, lunar, snarl.