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单词 Stuart
释义

Definition of Stuart in English:

Stuart

(also Stewart)
adjectiveˈstjuːətˈst(j)uərt
  • Relating to the royal family ruling Scotland 1371–1714 and Britain 1603–1649 and 1660–1714.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • From 1424, however, he could demonstrate the Stewart characteristics of energy, intellect, and impulsiveness.
    • However, once again he was pre-empted when the earl of Arran (heir to the Stewart succession) was proclaimed governor of Scotland on 3 January 1543.
    • At such times he acted with all the calculation of a Stuart king in carefully arranging the time and location of a parliament to best suit his personal agenda.
noun ˈstjuːətˈst(j)uərt
  • A member of the Stuart family.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • King James I of England, among others, was a Stuart: of Scottish ancestry, and steward of the throne of Scotland.
    • The English crown was unwilling to enforce the privileges of towns and guilds after the political crisis over ‘monopolies’ that peaked under the Stuarts.
    • Woodcuts of the Stuarts, male or female, tend not to appear on ballads that relate ‘real’ stories of action in ordinary homes or lives.
    • I'm looking forward to the Tudors and Stewarts.
    • Surprisingly, perhaps, although the Stuarts came to power in a peaceful manner, James's son Charles I was himself involved in a civil war.
    • By 1695, the English parliament had seized to itself an authority to influence financial policy to an extent unimaginable under the Stuarts.
    • The Restoration brought back the Stuarts but not intensive royal patronage.
    • Though it was little used under the later Stuarts and Hanoverians, it was restored by George IV, Victoria, and George V, and is now used frequently.
    • But the Hanoverians get their claim to the throne via the Stuarts, and they get their claim via the Tudors.
    • This was crucial when there was a rival dynasty in the shape of the Stuarts, with ‘James III’ a claimant throughout both reigns.
    • Coke and his companions opposing the early Stuarts construed the Charter anachronistically and uncritically.
    • It suggests that Parliament itself had fallen for the antiquarian myth so carefully preserved and nurtured by the Stuarts.
    • Even under the Stuarts, when scholars were becoming wary of it, it was still celebrated by poets and playwrights.
    • Her status meant that her journey through the realm newly acquired by the Stuarts occasioned considerable pomp and ceremony.
    • The newcomers included both the Bruces and the Stewarts, who would play major roles in Scots history.
    • The remaining lands were sold by Elizabeth I and the early Stuarts.
    • The moment had passed, however, and the exiled Stuarts now became no more than useful pawns in foreign hands.
    • Since the Stuarts never faced a realistic threat of invasion, they never had a good excuse to insist on unpalatable fiscal innovations.
    • Bank of Scotland had a reputation for being a Jacobite bank, warm to the prospects of Stuarts back on the throne.
    • They realised that a Britain with a Stuart on the throne need not be any friendlier towards them than the country already was.
 
 

Definition of Stuart in US English:

Stuart

(also Stewart)
adjectiveˈst(j)uərtˈst(y)o͞oərt
  • Relating to the royal family ruling Scotland 1371–1714 and Britain 1603–49 and 1660–1714.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • From 1424, however, he could demonstrate the Stewart characteristics of energy, intellect, and impulsiveness.
    • However, once again he was pre-empted when the earl of Arran (heir to the Stewart succession) was proclaimed governor of Scotland on 3 January 1543.
    • At such times he acted with all the calculation of a Stuart king in carefully arranging the time and location of a parliament to best suit his personal agenda.
nounˈst(j)uərtˈst(y)o͞oərt
  • A member of the Stuart family.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Since the Stuarts never faced a realistic threat of invasion, they never had a good excuse to insist on unpalatable fiscal innovations.
    • I'm looking forward to the Tudors and Stewarts.
    • Coke and his companions opposing the early Stuarts construed the Charter anachronistically and uncritically.
    • By 1695, the English parliament had seized to itself an authority to influence financial policy to an extent unimaginable under the Stuarts.
    • Woodcuts of the Stuarts, male or female, tend not to appear on ballads that relate ‘real’ stories of action in ordinary homes or lives.
    • But the Hanoverians get their claim to the throne via the Stuarts, and they get their claim via the Tudors.
    • It suggests that Parliament itself had fallen for the antiquarian myth so carefully preserved and nurtured by the Stuarts.
    • They realised that a Britain with a Stuart on the throne need not be any friendlier towards them than the country already was.
    • Though it was little used under the later Stuarts and Hanoverians, it was restored by George IV, Victoria, and George V, and is now used frequently.
    • This was crucial when there was a rival dynasty in the shape of the Stuarts, with ‘James III’ a claimant throughout both reigns.
    • Even under the Stuarts, when scholars were becoming wary of it, it was still celebrated by poets and playwrights.
    • Bank of Scotland had a reputation for being a Jacobite bank, warm to the prospects of Stuarts back on the throne.
    • King James I of England, among others, was a Stuart: of Scottish ancestry, and steward of the throne of Scotland.
    • The remaining lands were sold by Elizabeth I and the early Stuarts.
    • The English crown was unwilling to enforce the privileges of towns and guilds after the political crisis over ‘monopolies’ that peaked under the Stuarts.
    • Her status meant that her journey through the realm newly acquired by the Stuarts occasioned considerable pomp and ceremony.
    • Surprisingly, perhaps, although the Stuarts came to power in a peaceful manner, James's son Charles I was himself involved in a civil war.
    • The newcomers included both the Bruces and the Stewarts, who would play major roles in Scots history.
    • The moment had passed, however, and the exiled Stuarts now became no more than useful pawns in foreign hands.
    • The Restoration brought back the Stuarts but not intensive royal patronage.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/22 20:19:12