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单词 royalist
释义

Definition of royalist in English:

royalist

noun ˈrɔɪəlɪstˈrɔɪələst
  • 1A person who supports the principle of monarchy or a particular monarchy.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • However, Charles X replaced him in 1829 with a new ministry containing some of the most unpopular royalists in France, led by the prince of Polignac.
    • It has been suggested that such jewelry was made for royalists celebrating the restoration of the French monarchy in 1815.
    • The golden jubilee had been looked forward to with relish by royalists and pooh-poohed by metropolitan media pundits.
    • The poll - the first major study of Scottish attitudes to the monarchy for two years - is particularly disappointing for royalists because it was conducted during the Queen's high-profile visit to Scotland last week.
    • In the wake of the crisis, relations between Victor Emanuel II and the Church hierarchy deteriorated, while a permanent split developed on the far right between royalists and clerics.
    • The king's abdication and replacement by his son is unlikely to usher in major changes in Cambodia unless the former king decides to jump into the political arena, political analysts and royalists say.
    • Bismarck had long believed that the lower classes were better royalists than the middle classes.
    • The royalists will argue that the royal palaces, grounds and pageantry bring in millions of pounds in tourism and I will not argue with that.
    • But it really was not until 1824 that the royalists were defeated and Spanish power in the whole continent was finally overthrown.
    • The royalists believe the monarch is a national icon.
    • The problem with saying that you don't support the Royal Family is that royalists always blow the dust off the same old riposte.
    • Swinney further angered royalists and political opponents by suggesting that this month's golden jubilee celebrations were ‘over the top’.
    • The crowd of royalists and the curious cheered as Prince Charles unveiled a plaque marking his visit.
    • But while the poll may serve as a wake up call for royalists in Scotland, the Conservative Party insisted there is still strong support for the monarchy and much to commend it.
    • As a Liberal, Adelard Godbout was a supporter of Mackenzie King, the prime minister of Canada, and a royalist in sympathy with the British cause.
    • Louis-Napoleon was also supported by royalists, who had been seething in impotence since February and imagined that they could use him as a bridge to the restoration of the monarchy.
    • Unable to present a viable alternative, the royalists were outmanoeuvred, sidelined and, in 1998, defeated.
    • It's at times like this that I'm jolly glad that we are still royalists in this country.
    • Even ardent royalists may soon begin to feel that their idols are unworthy of either respect or affection.
    • The coalition between Communists and royalists continued, however, and the ensuing political stabilization was helped by the surrender of the last Khmer Rouge units in 1999.
    1. 1.1 A supporter of the King against Parliament in the English Civil War.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • After Charles I's execution and the abolition of the monarchy in 1649, the Prince of Wales became - at least to Royalists - the exiled King Charles II.
      • In 1644, the Parliamentary forces of General Thomas Fairfax, fresh from victory at Marston Moor, targeted Royalists at Helmsley Castle.
      • But the Parliamentary army finally surprised the Royalists at Marston Moor and defeated them in a ferocious battle.
      • The Royalists attacked twice, on February 18, and March 28, 1643, and were each time driven off with heavy losses.
      • Most of the artefacts recovered during the excavations relate to the English Civil War sieges between 1644 and 1649 when Royalists held the castle against Oliver Cromwell's Parliamentarians.
      • The Royalists supported the king, Charles I, who believed that he ruled by the divine right of God, and answered to no one.
      • The Wren family, obviously much favoured by the King, were staunch Royalists.
      • To secure their route of communications between the vital cities, the Royalists had to take the town and, on December 5 1642, they approached the town from the north.
      • In the following years Milton wrote against the Royalists, mysteriously escaping the scaffold for his scandalous comments.
      • The battle, though small, had an important effect on the outcome of the Civil War in Wales, driving the Royalists out of Pembrokeshire.
      • When the Swan arrived on the 5th of September 1653, the Royalists had already fled so the Castle put up no resistance.
      • This was the time of the Civil War between the Royalists and Parliamentarians and Wallis used his skills in cryptography in decoding Royalist messages for the Parliamentarians.
      • Political unrest and reform were sweeping across Europe, highlighted in England by the Civil War between the Royalists and the Parliamentarians.
      • He was in command of Sheffield Castle from 1643 until 1644, holding it for the Royalists until surrendering after the Battle of Marston Moor.
      • He was a military leader and tactician of undisputed genius, who won victory after victory for the Royalists during the bloody religious conflicts that tore 17th century Scotland apart.
      • The Battle of Marston Moor resulted in the Royalists losing control of the North of England.
      • Sir Richard was fatally wounded while fighting for the Royalists at Marston Moor and died at Norton Conyers with Cromwell hot on his heels.
      • In what was one of the first actions of the Civil War, the Royalists, under the Earl of Newcastle, attacked on Sunday, December 18.
      • In March 1644 the Royalists under Lord Hopton and the Parliamentarians under Sir William Waller were heading for a showdown.
      • The New Model Army fought the Royalists at the Battle of Naseby in June
      Synonyms
      royalist, king's man
    2. 1.2US A supporter of the British during the War of American Independence.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The American Revolution was led by descendants of New England Puritans and southern Royalists, many of them intensely proud of their English origins, culture, and identity.
adjective ˈrɔɪəlɪstˈrɔɪələst
  • 1Giving support to the monarchy.

    the paper claims to be royalist
    Example sentencesExamples
    • If the populist, royalist Daily Mail saw itself as supporting a very successful project, the tone in the Telegraph remained more in keeping with older ideas of the monarchy.
    • Hywel's name may carry the same significance, or be later royalist propaganda projected into a mythical past.
    • Suspicious of royalist strength and opposing the armistice made with Prussia, the Communards wanted to continue the war and were determined that France should regain the principles of the First Republic.
    • In the event, parliament proceeded with a nauseous display of collective royalist sycophancy and mourning for Britain's past imperial grandeur.
    • Famed for her romantic entanglements, Royalist leanings and stiff upper lip resolve, Scottish aristocrat Grace Dalrymple Elliott spent the dark aftermath of the French Revolution trapped in Paris.
    • Saudi Arabia and Jordan supported Badr's royalist forces to oppose the newly formed republic.
    • He sounds suspiciously royalist himself at times.
    • A succession of royalist intrigues had already been exposed.
    • Part of the explanation of the fighting around 1690 was that James's supporters, particularly the Vatican and royalist France, would not accept his successors.
    • Yugoslavia as it emerged from World War Two was the product of a popular movement against the Nazi occupation and Serbian royalist forces.
    • On Chambord's death Lyautey's royalist sympathies seem to have atrophied.
    • Our report on the Yorkshire Evening Post's premature coverage of the death of the Queen Mother caused outrage among royalist Register readers.
    • This royalist victory was partly because the Bonapartists and republicans were both discredited by fighting a losing war, and partly because many of the local notables who were elected were instinctively royalist.
    • The political pendulum swung back towards the crown in 1772 when an increasingly discredited system was overturned by Gustav III's remarkably popular royalist coup.
    • I think he's a brilliant humanitarian and does a lot of good work, but I'm not sure if it would have been the best thing for us to do to do a staunchly royalist concert to support our second record.
    • Louis-Napoleon seemed a pliable figurehead to the old monarchist élites, a means of resurrecting royalist values at a time when traditional monarchy was truly impossible.
    1. 1.1 (in the English Civil War) supporting the King against Parliament.
      the Royalist army
      Example sentencesExamples
      • There were Royalist revolts, an especially serious one occurring in 1655.
      • During the English Civil War, the castle was held by Royalist supporters throughout three sieges resulting in it being largely demolished after 1649.
      • Typhus was rife in the Civil War in Britain, when both the Parliamentary and Royalist armies were affected.
      • The pub's history dates back to the seventeenth century, with claims that Sir Thomas Fairfax's wife was captured by Royalist forces in 1643 on the spot where it now stands.
      • The previously invincible Royalist leader, Prince Rupert, was looking to relieve the siege of York by Parliamentary and Scottish forces, and to keep the north of England as a stronghold for King Charles I.
      • Historians of the English Civil War tell us that the Parliamentary and Royalist sides did not divide equally on grounds of religion.
      • During a mission to recapture a fort near the Irish port of Waterford from Royalist forces in 1645, Cromwell's flagship was sent to the bottom of the sea by a combination of enemy cannon and the rocky coastline.
      • In 1641, Anne's Royalist father, Edward, became an unofficial advisor to King Charles I and, by the time of the Civil War, he had joined the King's Council as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
      • They were tracing the route of the Royalist army of Prince Rupert just before it took part in the battle of Marston Moor in July 1644.
      • On Saturday June 19 the English Civil War Society is due to present a re-enactment of the Battle of Marlborough and the capture of the town by Royalist forces.
      • In 1645, Royalist troops were defeated at the Civil War battle of Naseby.
      • The Royal Court and its entourage had decamped from London to York in late spring of that year, putting York and Yorkshire at the centre of Royalist activism.
      • However, Harlech was the very last Royalist stronghold to fall during the Civil War.
      • In 1646 the Royalist army surrendered and the King handed himself over to the Scots, who had fought on the side of parliament.
      • Sir Thomas Fairfax found himself behind the Royalist line, so he took off all insignia and rode through their lines until he could reach safety.
      • Dressed in Royalist uniforms and on horseback, they will follow the route taken by Prince Rupert in 1644 when he led a relief force of infantry and cavalry across the Pennines.
      • In 1651 Oliver Cromwell's army defeated Royalist forces at the Battle of Worcester.
      • In July 1642 Milton married Mary Powell, daughter of Royalist parents; he was 33, she 17.
      • During the Civil War she actively supported the Royalist cause, raising money and troops.
      • At Marston Moor, in 1644, he commanded the left wing of the royalist army.

Derivatives

  • royalism

  • noun ˈrɔɪəlɪz(ə)mˈrɔɪəlˌɪzəm
    • There were two options for royalism after 1814: to attempt to revive absolutism or to accept constitutional monarchy - in other words, royal Bonapartism or royal parliamentarianism.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Internet is a hotbed of royalism; anti-monarchism and republicanism are comparatively thinly represented.
      • Balancing royalism with the region's often virulent strain of fundamentalism has never been easy.
      • The history of rights as a political language is properly associated with movements of resistance to royalism, culminating in the English, American, and French revolutions.
      • In England, the staunch royalism of the reformed monasteries was reciprocated by King Edgar's support for the enhancement of clerical status through adherence to the ideals of Benedictine monasticism.

Rhymes

loyalist
 
 

Definition of royalist in US English:

royalist

nounˈroiələstˈrɔɪələst
  • 1A person who supports the principle of monarchy or a particular monarchy.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The king's abdication and replacement by his son is unlikely to usher in major changes in Cambodia unless the former king decides to jump into the political arena, political analysts and royalists say.
    • In the wake of the crisis, relations between Victor Emanuel II and the Church hierarchy deteriorated, while a permanent split developed on the far right between royalists and clerics.
    • The problem with saying that you don't support the Royal Family is that royalists always blow the dust off the same old riposte.
    • Swinney further angered royalists and political opponents by suggesting that this month's golden jubilee celebrations were ‘over the top’.
    • But while the poll may serve as a wake up call for royalists in Scotland, the Conservative Party insisted there is still strong support for the monarchy and much to commend it.
    • It has been suggested that such jewelry was made for royalists celebrating the restoration of the French monarchy in 1815.
    • Bismarck had long believed that the lower classes were better royalists than the middle classes.
    • The golden jubilee had been looked forward to with relish by royalists and pooh-poohed by metropolitan media pundits.
    • It's at times like this that I'm jolly glad that we are still royalists in this country.
    • As a Liberal, Adelard Godbout was a supporter of Mackenzie King, the prime minister of Canada, and a royalist in sympathy with the British cause.
    • The poll - the first major study of Scottish attitudes to the monarchy for two years - is particularly disappointing for royalists because it was conducted during the Queen's high-profile visit to Scotland last week.
    • The royalists believe the monarch is a national icon.
    • Unable to present a viable alternative, the royalists were outmanoeuvred, sidelined and, in 1998, defeated.
    • Even ardent royalists may soon begin to feel that their idols are unworthy of either respect or affection.
    • The crowd of royalists and the curious cheered as Prince Charles unveiled a plaque marking his visit.
    • However, Charles X replaced him in 1829 with a new ministry containing some of the most unpopular royalists in France, led by the prince of Polignac.
    • But it really was not until 1824 that the royalists were defeated and Spanish power in the whole continent was finally overthrown.
    • The coalition between Communists and royalists continued, however, and the ensuing political stabilization was helped by the surrender of the last Khmer Rouge units in 1999.
    • Louis-Napoleon was also supported by royalists, who had been seething in impotence since February and imagined that they could use him as a bridge to the restoration of the monarchy.
    • The royalists will argue that the royal palaces, grounds and pageantry bring in millions of pounds in tourism and I will not argue with that.
    1. 1.1 A supporter of the king against Parliament in the English Civil War.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He was a military leader and tactician of undisputed genius, who won victory after victory for the Royalists during the bloody religious conflicts that tore 17th century Scotland apart.
      • The Battle of Marston Moor resulted in the Royalists losing control of the North of England.
      • Political unrest and reform were sweeping across Europe, highlighted in England by the Civil War between the Royalists and the Parliamentarians.
      • The New Model Army fought the Royalists at the Battle of Naseby in June
      • After Charles I's execution and the abolition of the monarchy in 1649, the Prince of Wales became - at least to Royalists - the exiled King Charles II.
      • The Royalists attacked twice, on February 18, and March 28, 1643, and were each time driven off with heavy losses.
      • The battle, though small, had an important effect on the outcome of the Civil War in Wales, driving the Royalists out of Pembrokeshire.
      • He was in command of Sheffield Castle from 1643 until 1644, holding it for the Royalists until surrendering after the Battle of Marston Moor.
      • In March 1644 the Royalists under Lord Hopton and the Parliamentarians under Sir William Waller were heading for a showdown.
      • In 1644, the Parliamentary forces of General Thomas Fairfax, fresh from victory at Marston Moor, targeted Royalists at Helmsley Castle.
      • This was the time of the Civil War between the Royalists and Parliamentarians and Wallis used his skills in cryptography in decoding Royalist messages for the Parliamentarians.
      • To secure their route of communications between the vital cities, the Royalists had to take the town and, on December 5 1642, they approached the town from the north.
      • Sir Richard was fatally wounded while fighting for the Royalists at Marston Moor and died at Norton Conyers with Cromwell hot on his heels.
      • The Wren family, obviously much favoured by the King, were staunch Royalists.
      • When the Swan arrived on the 5th of September 1653, the Royalists had already fled so the Castle put up no resistance.
      • In the following years Milton wrote against the Royalists, mysteriously escaping the scaffold for his scandalous comments.
      • Most of the artefacts recovered during the excavations relate to the English Civil War sieges between 1644 and 1649 when Royalists held the castle against Oliver Cromwell's Parliamentarians.
      • The Royalists supported the king, Charles I, who believed that he ruled by the divine right of God, and answered to no one.
      • But the Parliamentary army finally surprised the Royalists at Marston Moor and defeated them in a ferocious battle.
      • In what was one of the first actions of the Civil War, the Royalists, under the Earl of Newcastle, attacked on Sunday, December 18.
    2. 1.2US A supporter of the British during the American Revolution; a Tory.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The American Revolution was led by descendants of New England Puritans and southern Royalists, many of them intensely proud of their English origins, culture, and identity.
adjectiveˈroiələstˈrɔɪələst
  • 1Giving support to the monarchy.

    the paper claims to be royalist
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Part of the explanation of the fighting around 1690 was that James's supporters, particularly the Vatican and royalist France, would not accept his successors.
    • Famed for her romantic entanglements, Royalist leanings and stiff upper lip resolve, Scottish aristocrat Grace Dalrymple Elliott spent the dark aftermath of the French Revolution trapped in Paris.
    • If the populist, royalist Daily Mail saw itself as supporting a very successful project, the tone in the Telegraph remained more in keeping with older ideas of the monarchy.
    • He sounds suspiciously royalist himself at times.
    • A succession of royalist intrigues had already been exposed.
    • Yugoslavia as it emerged from World War Two was the product of a popular movement against the Nazi occupation and Serbian royalist forces.
    • I think he's a brilliant humanitarian and does a lot of good work, but I'm not sure if it would have been the best thing for us to do to do a staunchly royalist concert to support our second record.
    • On Chambord's death Lyautey's royalist sympathies seem to have atrophied.
    • In the event, parliament proceeded with a nauseous display of collective royalist sycophancy and mourning for Britain's past imperial grandeur.
    • Saudi Arabia and Jordan supported Badr's royalist forces to oppose the newly formed republic.
    • This royalist victory was partly because the Bonapartists and republicans were both discredited by fighting a losing war, and partly because many of the local notables who were elected were instinctively royalist.
    • Hywel's name may carry the same significance, or be later royalist propaganda projected into a mythical past.
    • The political pendulum swung back towards the crown in 1772 when an increasingly discredited system was overturned by Gustav III's remarkably popular royalist coup.
    • Our report on the Yorkshire Evening Post's premature coverage of the death of the Queen Mother caused outrage among royalist Register readers.
    • Suspicious of royalist strength and opposing the armistice made with Prussia, the Communards wanted to continue the war and were determined that France should regain the principles of the First Republic.
    • Louis-Napoleon seemed a pliable figurehead to the old monarchist élites, a means of resurrecting royalist values at a time when traditional monarchy was truly impossible.
    1. 1.1 (in the English Civil War) supporting the King against Parliament.
      the Royalist army
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In July 1642 Milton married Mary Powell, daughter of Royalist parents; he was 33, she 17.
      • They were tracing the route of the Royalist army of Prince Rupert just before it took part in the battle of Marston Moor in July 1644.
      • However, Harlech was the very last Royalist stronghold to fall during the Civil War.
      • In 1641, Anne's Royalist father, Edward, became an unofficial advisor to King Charles I and, by the time of the Civil War, he had joined the King's Council as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
      • In 1646 the Royalist army surrendered and the King handed himself over to the Scots, who had fought on the side of parliament.
      • Dressed in Royalist uniforms and on horseback, they will follow the route taken by Prince Rupert in 1644 when he led a relief force of infantry and cavalry across the Pennines.
      • The pub's history dates back to the seventeenth century, with claims that Sir Thomas Fairfax's wife was captured by Royalist forces in 1643 on the spot where it now stands.
      • Sir Thomas Fairfax found himself behind the Royalist line, so he took off all insignia and rode through their lines until he could reach safety.
      • During the Civil War she actively supported the Royalist cause, raising money and troops.
      • At Marston Moor, in 1644, he commanded the left wing of the royalist army.
      • Typhus was rife in the Civil War in Britain, when both the Parliamentary and Royalist armies were affected.
      • In 1651 Oliver Cromwell's army defeated Royalist forces at the Battle of Worcester.
      • On Saturday June 19 the English Civil War Society is due to present a re-enactment of the Battle of Marlborough and the capture of the town by Royalist forces.
      • During the English Civil War, the castle was held by Royalist supporters throughout three sieges resulting in it being largely demolished after 1649.
      • There were Royalist revolts, an especially serious one occurring in 1655.
      • Historians of the English Civil War tell us that the Parliamentary and Royalist sides did not divide equally on grounds of religion.
      • The Royal Court and its entourage had decamped from London to York in late spring of that year, putting York and Yorkshire at the centre of Royalist activism.
      • The previously invincible Royalist leader, Prince Rupert, was looking to relieve the siege of York by Parliamentary and Scottish forces, and to keep the north of England as a stronghold for King Charles I.
      • In 1645, Royalist troops were defeated at the Civil War battle of Naseby.
      • During a mission to recapture a fort near the Irish port of Waterford from Royalist forces in 1645, Cromwell's flagship was sent to the bottom of the sea by a combination of enemy cannon and the rocky coastline.
 
 
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