czar

listen to the pronunciation of czar
English - Turkish
çar

Çar, Rusya'nın hükümdarıydı. - The czar was the ruler of Russia.

Rus Çarı Büyük Peter eğlenmek için insanların dişini çekerdi. - Peter the Great, Czar of Russia, used to take out people's teeth for fun.

(isim) çar
tsar
çar

Çar, Rusya'nın hükümdarıydı. - The tsar was the ruler of Russia.

drug czar
ilaç car
tsar
(isim) çar
tsar
i., bak. czar
tzar
{i} çar
tzar
(isim) çar
tzar
i., bak. czar
English - English
{n} the usual title of the emperor of Russia
a person having great power a male monarch or emperor (especially of Russia prior to 1917)
A king; a chief; the title of the emperor of Russia
a person having great power
A Slavic emperor (not necessarily a Russian emperor)
{i} emperor; emperor of Russia before the revolution
a male monarch or emperor (especially of Russia prior to 1917)
tsar
An emperor of Russia (before 1917) and of some South Slavic kingdoms
tsar
A person with great power; an autocrat
tzar
{n} the emperor of Russia
Russian czar
{i} names for the kings of Russia before the revolution
czars
plural of czar
drug czar
an official employed by a government to try to stop the trade of illegal drugs
tsar
An appointed official tasked to regulate or oversee a specific area
tsar
A Slavic emperor (not necessarily a Russian emperor)
tsar
The title of the emperor of Russia
tsar
A particular kind of tsar is a person who has been appointed by the government to deal with a particular problem that is affecting the country. the former New York police chief who was appointed as `drug tsar' by Bill Clinton. Variant of czar. tzar, czar a male ruler of Russia before 1917. or czar Byzantine or Russian emperor. The title, derived from caesar, was used in the Middle Ages to refer to a supreme ruler, particularly the Byzantine emperor. With the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453, the Russian monarch became the only remaining Orthodox monarch, and the Russian Orthodox clergy considered him a possible new supreme head of Orthodox Christianity. Ivan IV (the Terrible) was the first to be crowned tsar, in 1547. Though theoretically wielding absolute power, he and his successors were limited by the power of the Orthodox church, the Boyar Council, and the successive legal codes of 1497, 1550, and 1649. In 1721 Peter I changed his title to "Emperor of All Russia," but he and his successors continued to be popularly called tsars
tsar
a male monarch or emperor (especially of Russia prior to 1917)
tsar
In former times, the tsar was the king of Russia
tsar
{i} czar, emperor; title of Russian emperors before the Bolshevik Revolution
tsars
plural of tsar
tzar
{i} czar, emperor; title of Russian emperors before the Bolshevik Revolution
tzar
Variant of czar. another spelling of tsar
tzar
A Slavic emperor (not necessarily a Russian emperor)
czar

    Turkish pronunciation

    zär

    Pronunciation

    /ˈzär/ /ˈzɑːr/

    Etymology

    [ 'zär, '(t)sär ] (noun.) 1555. New Latin czar, from Russian tsar', from Old Russian tsisari, from Gothic kaisar, from Greek or Latin; Greek, from Latin Caesar; more at CAESAR.
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