James II, William III, Anne, George I
They are the same. While a king reigns, it is the King's English. While a queen reigns, it is the Queen's English------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The monarch of England is sometimes a king and sometimes a queen (at the present time, March 2013, it is Queen Elizabeth II) but the English language does not change; it is the monarch's English. We just use different terms to reflect the identity of the reigning monarch.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The expression "the queen's English" refers to the reigning British monarch. Since English currently has a queen, and has for almost 60 years, the proper expression is "the queen's English."-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------I suppose when Charles becomes king, the expression might change to "the king's English."----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ACTUALLY, the expression "The King's English" refers to a title of a book written by the Fowler brothers in 1906, which deals with the English language, its pronunciation, etc. A book's title does not change just because a monarch changes. Therefore, it is "The King's English", regardless of whether the current monarch is male or female.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It comes from the old west, when people where ridding there wagons, one guy held the horse reigns, and other guy had a shotgun, watching out of Indians or raiders.
Kingdom is the geographical boundaries where a King reigns while an Empire is reign over many regions or other kingdoms brought under reign outside the kingdom by an Emperor.
The novel of the Painted Veil, written by Somerset Maugham, is mainly set in 3 different places: England, Hong Kong and Mei Tan Fu. England is Kitty's hometown where she meets Walter; Hong Kong is where she lives with Walter and has her affair with Charles Townsend; Mei Tan Fu is the town where a cholera epidemic reigns and Walter is helping.
As a noun it is the quality of being quiet. Silence reigns supreme in an empty room. As a verb it is the action of causing silence. 'Silence that man.' the judge ordered the bailiff. P.S. You literally answered your own question by example.
James II, William III, Anne, George I
James II, William III, Anne, George I
James II, William III, Anne, George I
James II, William III, Anne, George I
James II, William III, Anne, George I
Shakespeare lived in the reigns of two English monarchs, Elizabeth I and James I, whose reigns are known as the Elizabethan Age and the Jacobean Age respectively.
Tej Bunnag's mother.
The Renaissance in England spanned several reigns, but Elizabeth I was one of the prominent monarchs during that era. The two terms are not, however, strictly equivalent.
Shakespeare wrote history plays about English monarchs such as Richard II, Henry IV, Henry V, Henry VI, and Richard III. These plays depicted key events from their reigns and explored themes of power, ambition, and loyalty.
"The Lord is King," or "the Lord reigns," are common treatments.
James II, William III, Anne, George I
yes