How to use in-sentence of “monarch”:
+ Following Richard CromwellRichard Cromwell’s resignation of May 25th 1659 he was succeeded by the Charles II took back power and was restored as the monarch of England, Scotland and Ireland.
+ Under the Constitution, of the Republic of India, the President replaced the Monarch as ceremonial head of state.
+ Jamshid had now become the greatest monarch the world had ever known.
+ The Gambia became a republic in 1970 and the Monarch and Governor-General were replaced by an executive President.
+ Wu Zetian Wu Tse-tien; was the first female monarch of China.

Example sentences of “monarch”:
+ They give advice to the monarch on things happening related to the government.
+ However, it is also about the balance between monarch and Parliament.
+ They give advice to the monarch on things happening related to the government.
+ However, it is also about the balance between monarch and Parliament.
+ Torture was forbidden, except by the express instruction of the monarch or a body such as the Privy Council of the United KingdomPrivy Council or the Star Chamber.
+ The Governor General of Australia does the work of the monarch for the national Government.
+ In an absolute monarchy the monarch is the only source of all laws.
+ When there is a monarch ruling a country as an absolute monarchy, this is also called an autocracy.
+ In North America, the monarch is found from southern Canada to northern South America.
+ He put a label on each Monarch he found.
+ In countries where the monarch can dismiss or appoint governments, this is usually only done to make sure that the democratic process is respected, without taking sides in politics.
+ In the UK, the monarch gives or takes away whether a place is a city or not.
+ These were questions of how much power the monarch and Parliament should have, and how much one should control the other.
+ Life for a monarch butterfly begins as an egg hatched from an adult.
+ This title was usually granted by a monarch to reward a subject for longtime faithful service or some very notable deeds.
+ The Iwang Puriklai was the absolute monarch of the kingdom.
More in-sentence examples of “monarch”:
+ He was the fourth Danish monarch of the House of Glucksburg.
+ Today, the only monarch to use the title “emperor” is the Emperor of Japan although his power is mostly ceremonyceremonial and the “de facto” head of government is the Prime Minister of Japan.
+ This was is a written order issued on behalf of the monarch to hold a general election.
+ The Governor-General of Grenada has been the representative of the Monarchy of GrenadaGrenadian monarch since the country’s independence from the United Kingdom in 1974.
+ Since 2009, Belgian law identifies the eldest child of a Belgian monarch the royal heir.
+ They’re an “acting monarch“, and does the job of a monarch where the real monarch is either too young, sick or cannot do what he is meant to for some other reason.
+ The monarch was the Head of the Church of England.
+ Sometimes the monarch is also the head of the state religion and makes religious laws also.
+ The notion that an emperor is a monarch who outranks a mere king dates from this period.
+ In Britain there was a formal presentation of the debutants to the monarch at Court.
+ The last French monarch was Napoleon III, who was an emperor rather than a king.
+ Queen Elizabeth II said that Goderich was “the prettiest town in Canada.” But no reigning monarch has ever visited the town.
+ Diapause may occur in a completely immobile stage, such as the pupae and eggs, or it may occur in very active stages that undergo extensive migrations, such as the adult Monarch butterfly, “Danaus plexippus”.
+ After a long search, He finally found millions of monarch butterflies covering every part of the area.
+ It was the first time since the Norman Conquest in 1066 that the monarch made a public speech in English.
+ It has a system of government known as a constitutional monarchy, meaning that it has a monarch, but that the monarch does not rule the country, and that a government is elected democratically.
+ France 3 Some states are clear case monarchies, where constitution does not limit the power of the monarch – In that context coming up with a term such as “religious democracy” is problematic; I don’t see a clear definition, or a clear field where I could say this state is a “religious democracy”.
+ This was discovered by Fred Urquhart of the University of Toronto, who studied monarch butterflies for nearly forty years.
+ The head of the Royal Australian Navy is the Monarch presently Queen Elizabeth II.
+ The Monarch is orange.
+ The Monarch is more orange.
+ After 1603, it had the same monarch as the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Ireland.
+ Lord of Mann the Monarch of England was head of state.
+ She was the last monarch of Hawaii.
+ In such a charter, a sovereign, a monarch granted the town or city special rights.
+ He was succeeded as monarch by his elder daughter, Elizabeth.
+ She was the first reigning monarch to visit Australia, New Zealand and Fiji.
+ This made her the first monarch to ride the Underground.
+ The monarch places this coat of arms on a mantle lined with Ermine.
+ As a Commonwealth realm, St Kitts and Nevis has the same monarch as several other Commonwealth countries, Queen Elizabeth II.
+ A very popular monarch she officially ruled the state with her husband but died prematurely after a reign of only 11 months.
+ The monarch during his term as Governor-General was Queen Elizabeth II.
+ Shortly after the death of Bogd Khaan, the last monarch of Mongolia the monarchy was replaced by a communist government in 1924, and the country was renamed the Mongolian People’s Republic.
+ In law, the head of the Royal Navy is the monarch or her consort, holding the ceremonial title of Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom.
+ Birds that have had the bad experience of eating a Monarch will usually not eat a Viceroy.
+ Queen Elizabeth II became the first reigning monarch to visit Australia in 1954, greeted by huge crowds across the nation.
+ When he was at MIT he was involved with the Monarch and Daedalus human powered airplane teams.
+ The monarch can also pick who gets to be the next monarch and can change the rules at any time.
+ The Irish State Coach is a carriage used by the British monarch to ride from Buckingham Palace to the Palace of Westminster to open Parliament.
+ The term “Restoration” means both the actual event which put a monarch back in power, and the period immediately after Charles II came to power.
+ The monarch or the person that represents them have to follow the advice of a group of people in the Privy Council, called the cabinet.
+ Ferdinand VI was a King of Spain July 1746 until his death in 1759 aged 49 He was the fourth son of the previous monarch Philip V of SpainPhilip V and his first wife Maria Luisa of Savoy.
+ In the “Insei” system, the monarch abdicated or retired and a new emperor was named; however, the old emperor held on to significant power and influence in the court and in the nation.
+ In some countries including Sweden since 1980, the Netherlands since 1983, Norway since 1990, Belgium since 1991, Denmark since 2009, and the United Kingdom since 2015, the eldest child of a monarch is expected to become the next monarch.
+ During state visits, the monarch and the visiting head of state are escorted in a state carriage up The Mall, and the street is decorated with Union Flags and the flags of the visiting head of state’s country.
+ The change may have been made to appease Catholics who could not accept the monarch as “Head of the Church”, seeing the church as the Pope’s domain, or it may have been made because Elizabeth was a woman.
+ A white form of the monarch has been seen in Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia and the United States.
+ He was born the heir to the title of Prince of Carignano, which was one of the most senior members of the Sardinian royal court behind the monarch himself.
+ He was the fourth Danish monarch of the House of Glucksburg.
+ Today, the only monarch to use the title "emperor" is the Emperor of Japan although his power is mostly ceremonyceremonial and the "de facto" head of government is the Prime Minister of Japan.
