亚洲网紅露点

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dynastic

[ dahy-nas-tik; British also dih-nas-tik ]

adjective

  1. of or relating to a dynasty, a sequence of rulers or other powerful or wealthy people, usually from the same family:

    Democracy, by definition, can't prohibit dynastic or corrupt rulers but it offers ways to correct or alter the situation.

    Artifacts found in the Royal Nubian burials at Qustul bear the oldest-known examples of Egyptian dynastic symbols, such as the white crown of Egypt and the falcon.



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Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms

  • 诲测路苍补蝉路迟颈路肠补濒路濒测 adverb
  • 补苍路迟颈路诲测路苍补蝉路迟颈肠 adjective
  • 补苍路迟颈路诲测路苍补蝉路迟颈路肠补濒 adjective
  • an路ti路诲测路苍补蝉路迟颈路肠补濒路濒测 adverb
  • 苍辞苍路诲测路苍补蝉路迟颈肠 adjective
  • 苍辞苍路诲测路苍补蝉路迟颈路肠补濒 adjective
  • non路诲测路苍补蝉路迟颈路肠补濒路濒测 adverb
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of dynastic1

First recorded in 1620鈥30, for an earlier sense; dynast(y) ( def ) + -ic ( def )
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

There was broad consensus over incorporating a ban on dynastic succession in the new constitution.

From

The business executive occupies the top of the corporate hierarchy 鈥 or, in the case of Trump, the dynastic hierarchy 鈥 dispensing judgment as he sees fit.

From

They are trying to become Major League Baseball鈥檚 first repeat champion since the New York Yankees from 1998 to 2000, the last undisputed dynastic run by any big-league club in the sport.

From

As we enter a New Age of Uncertainty, with ominous parallels to the last era of sustained polycrisis a century ago, dynastic families and political elites will both be faced with a stark choice.

From

It was a swift and spectacular collapse of a dynastic regime that terrorized the nation for half a century.

From

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dynastdynastid