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单词 dynastic
释义

Definition of dynastic in English:

dynastic

adjective dɪˈnastɪkdaɪˈnæstɪk
  • 1Relating to a line of hereditary rulers of a country.

    the last dynastic rulers of Rome
    dynastic monarchies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In dynastic China, the most prestigious career was government service.
    • Henry V's strategy was Edward's - to ally with French nobles to exploit their divisions and press his own dynastic claim.
    • This interest in allying rulership with time and cosmos stands in full accord with the ceremonial and commemorative practices of Maya dynastic kingship.
    • Emperor Xiaowen sought to center himself within the historical, geopolitical, and ritual complex of Chinese rulership and dynastic succession.
    • Discussions of ritual first appeared in the dynastic records of the Han period and contributed to the histories of later dynasties.
    • Often concerned with kingship, dynastic conflicts, and battles, these tales are sometimes also referred to as the king cycle.
    • He describes Plantagenet's dynastic claim to the throne deriving from Edward III.
    • Austria, with strong political and dynastic ties with Italy, was particularly italophile.
    • Although the Angevin monarchs no longer had most of their Angevin lands, their grand dynastic visions had not diminished.
    • By moving their capital to Delhi, then, the British symbolically sought to resolve centuries of dynastic struggle for control of the subcontinent.
    1. 1.1 Relating to a succession of people from the same family who play a prominent role in business, politics, or another field.
      the plot concerns the dynastic struggles of two brothers
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In many cases, management of the mills is almost dynastic, with families of rich farmers governing the mill as if it belongs to them and not to the shareholders.
      • The announcement leaves 32 - year-old James, who runs the corporation's British satellite TV operation, as the only dynastic heir.
      • The new machines carried the day and the exclusiveness of skilled workers, who had established an almost dynastic monopoly of some crafts, was broken down.
      • There was a strong dynastic element in the composition of these workshop teams.
      • These inventions awaited that other great dynastic prodigy, J S Bach, after his birth in 1685.
      • In the US, the ultra-affluent knew they were barely taxed so they made up for it with personal and dynastic philanthropy: think Carnegie, Mellon and Rockefeller.
      • Do we have too much dynastic power in American politics?
      • Some observers warn that the return of dynastic families in the US is a dangerous trend.
      • He also put himself in a better position to solve a problem endemic in dynastic businesses: no male heir.
      • Well, they do say that American politics is strangely dynastic for a democracy.

Derivatives

  • dynastically

  • adverb-ˈnastɪk(ə)li
    • The pressure was strong for her to make a dynastically advantageous marriage, and this seems to have led to tensions between mother and daughter.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It was not inevitable that they would never be recovered, and as an Angevin Henry was dynastically impelled to seek to regain his inheritance and restore the honour of his lineage.
      • The dynastically related western principality of Halych (Galicia) and Volyn resisted the Mongols and Tatars and became a Rus bastion through the fourteenth century.
      • She dynastically inherited her job as CEO of the auto parts business her father built from scratch.
      • By competing dynastically and territorially with his European counterparts, especially Francis I, Henry VIII acknowledged settled convention and, even more obviously, popular demand.

Rhymes

bombastic, drastic, ecclesiastic, elastic, encomiastic, enthusiastic, fantastic, gymnastic, iconoclastic, mastic, monastic, neoplastic, orgastic, orgiastic, periphrastic, plastic, pleonastic, sarcastic, scholastic, scholiastic

Definition of dynastic in US English:

dynastic

adjectivedīˈnastikdaɪˈnæstɪk
  • 1Relating to a line of hereditary rulers of a country.

    the last dynastic rulers of Rome
    dynastic monarchies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Often concerned with kingship, dynastic conflicts, and battles, these tales are sometimes also referred to as the king cycle.
    • Austria, with strong political and dynastic ties with Italy, was particularly italophile.
    • Although the Angevin monarchs no longer had most of their Angevin lands, their grand dynastic visions had not diminished.
    • He describes Plantagenet's dynastic claim to the throne deriving from Edward III.
    • This interest in allying rulership with time and cosmos stands in full accord with the ceremonial and commemorative practices of Maya dynastic kingship.
    • Discussions of ritual first appeared in the dynastic records of the Han period and contributed to the histories of later dynasties.
    • In dynastic China, the most prestigious career was government service.
    • By moving their capital to Delhi, then, the British symbolically sought to resolve centuries of dynastic struggle for control of the subcontinent.
    • Emperor Xiaowen sought to center himself within the historical, geopolitical, and ritual complex of Chinese rulership and dynastic succession.
    • Henry V's strategy was Edward's - to ally with French nobles to exploit their divisions and press his own dynastic claim.
    1. 1.1 Relating to a succession of people from the same family who play a prominent role in business, politics, or another field.
      the plot concerns the dynastic struggles of two brothers
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The new machines carried the day and the exclusiveness of skilled workers, who had established an almost dynastic monopoly of some crafts, was broken down.
      • He also put himself in a better position to solve a problem endemic in dynastic businesses: no male heir.
      • The announcement leaves 32 - year-old James, who runs the corporation's British satellite TV operation, as the only dynastic heir.
      • In many cases, management of the mills is almost dynastic, with families of rich farmers governing the mill as if it belongs to them and not to the shareholders.
      • These inventions awaited that other great dynastic prodigy, J S Bach, after his birth in 1685.
      • There was a strong dynastic element in the composition of these workshop teams.
      • Do we have too much dynastic power in American politics?
      • Some observers warn that the return of dynastic families in the US is a dangerous trend.
      • In the US, the ultra-affluent knew they were barely taxed so they made up for it with personal and dynastic philanthropy: think Carnegie, Mellon and Rockefeller.
      • Well, they do say that American politics is strangely dynastic for a democracy.
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更新时间:2025/1/30 21:41:05