释义 |
emperor noun—帝 n (often used) ()皇 n (often used) ()皇帝 n ()天皇 n ()Examples:Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), Emperor of France 1804-1815—Grand Prince Yixin (1833-1898), sixth son of Emperor Daoguang, prominent politician, diplomat and modernizer in late Qing—Timur or Tamerlane (1336-1405), Mongol emperor and conqueror—Charlemagne (c. 747-c. 814), King of the Franks, Holy Roman Emperor from 800—Yuan Shikai (1859-1916), senior general of late Qing, subsequently warlord and self-proclaimed emperor of China—hunting ground exclusively kept for emperor or nobility (in former times)—Liu Heng (202-157 BC), the fourth Han emperor Han Wendi, reigned 180-157 BC—Liu Bang (256 or 247-195 BC), first Han emperor, reigned 207-195 BC—place at the imperial court, where emperor handled government affairs, gave orders etc—Wenzong Emperor, reign name of Yuan Dynasty emperor Tugh Temür (1304-1332), reigned 1328-1332—Showa, reign name of Emperor Hirohiof Japan 1925-1989—Emperor Xuan (91-48 BC) of the Former Han Dynasty, reigned 74-48 BC—official responsible for arranging audiences with the emperor—a Qing prince who was the designated successor emperor Guangxu until the Boxer uprising—Cang Jie, legendary scribe of the Yellow Emperor and creator of Chinese writing—be bestowed, conferred, or granted by the emperor—kneel three times and kowtow nine times (formal etiquette on meeting the emperor)—childhood (typically used in reference an emperor)—posthumous name given second emperor of a dynasty—sultan (ruler of some Muslim states, esp. Ottoman Emperor)—burn the books (one of the crimes of the first Emperor in 212 BC)—Kangxi or K'ang Hsi, second Qing Emperor (1661-1722)—the emperor relatives (idiom); person with powerful connections—Li Yuan (566-635), first Tang emperor Gaozu, reigned 618-626—Gao Yun (died 409) emperor of Northern or Later Yan dynasty—reign name of penultimate Qing emperor Guangxu or Guang-hsu (1875-1908)—centralized power (history), e.g. under an Emperor or party— |