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单词 shogun
释义

Definition of shogun in English:

shogun

noun ˈʃəʊɡʊnˈʃoʊɡən
  • A hereditary commander-in-chief in feudal Japan. Because of the military power concentrated in his hands and the consequent weakness of the nominal head of state (the mikado or emperor), the shogun was generally the real ruler of the country until feudalism was abolished in 1867.

    幕府将军(日本封建时代世袭的最高军事指挥官,掌握着军权,削弱了名义元首 天皇的地位,在1867年日本废除封建制度前,实际上一直是国家真正的统治者)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They span from the days of the samurai and shogun, to 1945 when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.
    • Keichu Tokugawa, son of a former shogun, was treated no differently in Judo training than any of Kano's other students.
    • Hiroshige, who was born Ando Tokutaro, was a member of the samurai class, and, following in his father's professional footsteps, he was a part of the shogun's firefighting organization.
    • During the next two centuries, under the leadership of successive shoguns, Japan gradually achieved a stable population and more sustainable rates of resource consumption.
    • I am instructed to deliver it to the shogun as soon as possible.
    • Over time, these powerful families were, in turn, replaced as the real - but unofficial - locus of power by various shoguns.
    • Nevertheless, the shogun as the actual rulers, wanted to avoid any obvious offenses of the emperor and followed a system of formal ceremonies and regular visits and gifts to the emperor.
    • Its net worth was over a million dollars in the United States because it was an actual katana used by a shogun in ancient Japan.
    • The imperial court was a secluded world of its own, politically powerless, but well equipped with funds by the governing shoguns to dedicate themselves to fine arts.
    • The Kyoto Imperial Palace and the Nijo Castle, former home of the shoguns, are situated right in the heart of the city.
    • Lord Ieyasu received the title of shogun from the emperor in 1603, and opened his shogunate in Edo (current Tokyo).
    • Before, Great-Grandfather was only a low-ranking samurai, but after he saved the shogun, he bestowed upon him his name, and that is how we are today.
    • The Tokugawa shoguns instituted, in effect, wood rationing: building houses of lighter construction, and replacing wood as a fuel with coal and devising more efficient stoves and ovens.
    • The Kamakura shogunate represented the real power in the country until the resignation of the last shogun in 1867.
    • He flourished in the early times of the Tokugawa shoguns.
    • From then effective power lay with the shogun rather than the emperor.
    • The Tokugawa shoguns forbade the building of any ships large enough to sail the open ocean, and no one was allowed to leave the country.
    • In 1592 and 1597 the Japanese shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi embarked on disastrous invasions of Korea.
    • When in the following October the nobody met Katsu Kaishu, the enlightened commissioners of the shogun's navy, it might have been with intent to assassinate him.
    • They always had duel leadership the emperor as a figurehead, and shogun as a real leader.

Derivatives

  • shogunate

  • nounˈʃəʊɡʊnət
    • Day after day thousands of people die of confessing their loyalty to the Tokugawa shogunate.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Ashikaga military clan took control of the shogunate and moved its headquarters back to Kyoto, to the Muromachi district of the city.
      • Yoritomo's kamakura shogunate was replaced in 1333 by the Ashikaga shogunate, but its rule was one of prolonged civil strife.
      • The present temples were mostly reopened after the formation of the Tokugawa shogunate.
      • During the early part of the 17th century, Japan's shogunate suspected that the traders and missionaries were actually forerunners of a military conquest by European powers.
      • By the way, the great master Hiroshige was the son of a fire warden in the service of the shogunate.

Origin

Japanese, from Chinese jiāng jūn 'general'.

Rhymes

blowgun

Definition of shogun in US English:

shogun

nounˈʃoʊɡənˈSHōɡən
  • A hereditary commander in chief in feudal Japan. Because of the military power concentrated in his hands and the consequent weakness of the nominal head of state (the mikado or emperor), the shogun was generally the real ruler of the country until feudalism was abolished in 1867.

    幕府将军(日本封建时代世袭的最高军事指挥官,掌握着军权,削弱了名义元首 天皇的地位,在1867年日本废除封建制度前,实际上一直是国家真正的统治者)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They always had duel leadership the emperor as a figurehead, and shogun as a real leader.
    • Before, Great-Grandfather was only a low-ranking samurai, but after he saved the shogun, he bestowed upon him his name, and that is how we are today.
    • They span from the days of the samurai and shogun, to 1945 when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.
    • In 1592 and 1597 the Japanese shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi embarked on disastrous invasions of Korea.
    • The Kamakura shogunate represented the real power in the country until the resignation of the last shogun in 1867.
    • The Tokugawa shoguns instituted, in effect, wood rationing: building houses of lighter construction, and replacing wood as a fuel with coal and devising more efficient stoves and ovens.
    • Keichu Tokugawa, son of a former shogun, was treated no differently in Judo training than any of Kano's other students.
    • From then effective power lay with the shogun rather than the emperor.
    • Lord Ieyasu received the title of shogun from the emperor in 1603, and opened his shogunate in Edo (current Tokyo).
    • He flourished in the early times of the Tokugawa shoguns.
    • Nevertheless, the shogun as the actual rulers, wanted to avoid any obvious offenses of the emperor and followed a system of formal ceremonies and regular visits and gifts to the emperor.
    • The Kyoto Imperial Palace and the Nijo Castle, former home of the shoguns, are situated right in the heart of the city.
    • Its net worth was over a million dollars in the United States because it was an actual katana used by a shogun in ancient Japan.
    • Hiroshige, who was born Ando Tokutaro, was a member of the samurai class, and, following in his father's professional footsteps, he was a part of the shogun's firefighting organization.
    • Over time, these powerful families were, in turn, replaced as the real - but unofficial - locus of power by various shoguns.
    • When in the following October the nobody met Katsu Kaishu, the enlightened commissioners of the shogun's navy, it might have been with intent to assassinate him.
    • I am instructed to deliver it to the shogun as soon as possible.
    • The Tokugawa shoguns forbade the building of any ships large enough to sail the open ocean, and no one was allowed to leave the country.
    • The imperial court was a secluded world of its own, politically powerless, but well equipped with funds by the governing shoguns to dedicate themselves to fine arts.
    • During the next two centuries, under the leadership of successive shoguns, Japan gradually achieved a stable population and more sustainable rates of resource consumption.

Origin

Japanese, from Chinese jiāng jūn ‘general’.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 15:29:58