A sole or supreme ruler; a sovereign; the highest ruler; an emperor, king, queen, prince, or chief., One superior to all others of the same kind; as, an oak is called the monarch of the forest., A patron deity or presiding genius., A very large red and black butterfly (Danais Plexippus); -- called also milkweed butterfly., Superior to others; preeminent; supreme; ruling.
a sovereign head of state, especially a king, queen, or emperor.
it means wasteman
British monarch is the constitutional monarchy of United kingdom. The duties of the British monarch are diplomatic, official, ceremonial, and representational.
The "minority of the monarch" is when the monarch of any given nation is too young to rule properly, so a regent is chosen to govern in the name and on behalf of the Sovereign until the monarch comes of age. Most monarchies have their own systems, but to take the example of the United Kingdom, the Regency Acts ensure that there is an appropriate head-of-state through a Regency on the account of the minority of the monarch or if the monarch is incapable of performing royal functions. In the United Kingdom, I believe the monarch has to be 18 or older to govern by themselves.
In a monarchy, the monarch governs as the head of state. The monarch may have limited power with a constitution or be an absolute ruler with unchecked authority. Monarchies can vary in their structure and levels of power.
the monarch butterfly
monarch butterfly
This person would be the representative for the monarch in a colonial state. They would keep the peace and enforce new laws for the people.
The spelling is "monarch butterfly" (plural "monarch butterflies").
Monarch butterflies start their lives out as caterpillars. A 'baby monarch' would be a monarch caterpillar. Monarch caterpillars striped black and yellow along their back.
aztec monarch
chase monarch
monarch
An absolute monarch simply issues a decree. Whatever the monarch proclaims is automatically the law. In a limited monarchy, there is a parliament that makes laws, but the laws are then approved by the monarch. This is how the government of Great Britain functions. By tradition, Queen Elizabeth II will approve of any laws that Parliament passes; she does not exercise a veto. Even so, her approval is always required, if only for ceremonial purposes. In Canada, where Queen Elizabeth II is also the official head of state, laws are approved by the Governor General, who acts on behalf of the Queen.