The emperor ruled the county. He was the emperor of China. Some countries have a president or a monarch instead of an emperor.
The emperor will see you now. The emperor is showing off his new clothes.
He is effectively the equivalent of an emperor. However, he does not use the word "emperor", but the title "Supreme Leader".
St Petersburg was build by the Russian Emperor Peter the Great at 1703 and was for over 200 years the capital of the Empire until 1918 after the Russian Revolution of 1917.
The actual word is derived from the Russian word 'bolshe', which means more. Originally, the Bolsheviki (or Bolsheviks in English) were a radical faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party (RSDLP), a Marxist political party. The less radical faction of the RSDLP was called Mensheviki, derived from the word 'menshe', less. The Bolsheviks, of course, became the Russian Communist Party (the soviet union). The word "soviet" means "council" in Russian.
Another word for a Russian empress is Czarina. An empress is the wife or widow of an emperor or holds the rank of emperor in her own right and has great power and influence.
A Tsar (Царь in Russian)(Tzar, Csar or Czar) was the emperor of Russia until the 1917 February Revolution. Tsar is a Russification of the Roman word Caesar.The first Russian emperor to use the title was Tsar Ivan III (the Great). By the time the Romanovs came to power, it had become the standard title applied to the Russian head of state.male monarch or emperor
A tsar was a Russian emperor.
Another word for a Russian empress is Czarina. An empress is the wife or widow of an emperor or holds the rank of emperor in her own right and has great power and influence.
tsar or czar Like "Kaiser" in German, the Russian "Tsar" or "Czar" is derived from CAESAR, meaning Emperor. After Octavian Caesar became Caesar Augustus, all the Roman Emperors were known as Caesar, and it became synonymous with Emperor. This I found, as well as the Russian word for King being "Korol' ", in a Wikipedia article about the word Tsar. It's quite comprehensive.
It is Czar
'Tzar' is the Russian word for King, or Emperor- the Tzars were the Imperial rulers of Russia and her dominions, up until the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917.
No (unless one wants to explain the pronounciation of the word shah). The two names are unrelated. Shah is related to the Russian word Tsar, which means emperor.
Czar Alexander
Tsar Nicholas
"Czarina" is a term used to refer to the female counterpart or wife of a czar (emperor) in Russia. It is derived from the Russian word "tsaritsa." The title is typically used to denote the queen-like status of the female ruler in a monarchy.
The Russian word for "so" is "ΡΠ°ΠΊ" (tak).