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monarchal    
a. 君主的;帝王风度的

君主的;帝王风度的

monarchal
adj 1: having the characteristics of or befitting or worthy of a
monarch; "monarchical gestures"; "monarchal pomp" [synonym:
{monarchal}, {monarchical}]
2: ruled by or having the supreme power resting with a monarch;
"monarchal government"; "monarchical systems" [synonym:
{monarchal}, {monarchical}, {monarchic}]


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  • grammar - Usage of paid and paid for - English Language Learners . . .
    The verb paid takes objects that are the method of payment: credit cards, cash, seashells, etc You could say "The money has already been paid " The verb paid for takes objects that are the reason for the payment, in this case the service of repairing and repainting the car: "The service has already been paid for "
  • phrase usage - Why paid for by instead of paid by? - English . . .
    The electoral communication or message has been paid for by a group called "XXX for President, Inc" You pay for goods or services You don't pay goods or services Paid for by XXX for President, Inc i e "This communication was paid for by XXX for President, Inc " Put another way, "XXX for President, Inc paid for this message "
  • tense - I have got paid or I got paid? - English Language Learners . . .
    A more natural phrasing might be "I have been paid " But in a receipt you want to be a little more formal, and write something like "This confirms I have received payment in the amount of €X for the month of February 2021 "
  • prepositions - Items should be paid for within 14 days lt;of gt; lt;after . . .
    2a) Items should be paid for by 14 days after receipt Note that (2a) isn't particularly likely , but it's syntactically fine, and means exactly the same as (1) This difference arises because within needs to be coupled to the start of a relevant timeframe (not to some point after that time), whereas by references the end of the acceptable
  • word usage - Why does this BBC presenter say put pay, whereas . . .
    "Put paid to " is the correct idiom, but quite a few examples of "put pay to" can be found in literature, so BBC presenter Chris Packham is certainly not the first person to say it The origin of the phrase supposedly comes from the practice of stamping 'PAID' onto a bill which has been settled, finalising it The idiom doesn't really work
  • prepositions - Pay someone or Pay to someone? - English Language . . .
    When "pay to" specified a recipient, there will normally be an indication of what is being paid Either an amount ("pay $500 to Fred") or a description "The tenant will pay the rent to the landlord by the 3rd of the month " This will often be between "pay" and "to", but need not be, particularly in a formal legal context:
  • prepositions - I got paid for or by the job? - English Language . . .
    I got paid for my part time job I got paid by my part time job What I want to say here is "I got paid by working part time " I know I can just say "I got paid", but I want to say that I earned some money "from working part time job " Then which preposition should I use here?
  • verbs - Past tense - did pay or did paid - English Language Learners . . .
    You did paid the balance "Pay" is a main verb, and "did" (the past of do and does) is an auxiliary verb All these forms of the auxiliary are always used with a an infinitive without to whether you form an interrogative, negative, or emphatic sentence So the first sentence that is in the past is grammatical, whereas the second one is not correct
  • About the phrase pay off - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    loans "are paid off" when the lender finishes paying the principal and interest due on the loan The former has passed into an idiom beyond betting to mean any action taken that had a good result (in a context where you could have had a negative or zero result) or had a zero result (when no positive result was possible, only negatives and zero)
  • What is a word for services not provided or goods paid for but not . . .
    Another example would be if you left you car at the carwash for a day but it was returned to you without being washed even though you paid them Two words I found are: "scam" meaning a dishonest scheme, or "fraud" meaning a wrongful or criminal deception intended to result in financial or personal gain, but I'm not sure if either of these words





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