The moral to one of Aesop's fables. The Wolf and the Lamb to be exact.
The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny...its from a Wolf and the lamb
My interpretation is this phrase is that when a tyrant is determined to do something, he will always find a way to justify his actions, regardless of the true reason.
A tyrant.
In a dictatorship, the dictator maintains complete power over its citizens.
Tyranny- The king made tyranny laws that affected both good and bad people of the village because he was just wicked. Tyranny is a noun so it is not correct to say tyranny laws. In this example laws is a noun and tyranny is an adjective but the word tyranny can't function as an adjective. A better sentence: The refugees were trying to escape the tyranny and oppression of their homeland.
You get to do whatever you want - but only if you're the tyrant.
The Tyrant (whatever name he gives himself).
The Tyrant (whatever name he gives himself).
The Tyrant (whatever name he gives himself).
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'despot' is despotism.
Yes, the noun 'tyrant' is a noun, a word for a dictatorial ruler, a word for a person.The related noun for the condition is tyranny.
A Tyrant ruled he took over this city state in Greece by force.