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Emperor movie online. 38:00 WTF. Jess:HAJARRRRR. HAHAHA. Movie online emperor one. Nobody: Not a single soul: Darth Vader: His lightsaber. You guys remember in the Eldar short, Eldrad said he was going to tell Cypher to make the machine men of mars riled up. There's so many connections. I love it. Movie online emperor play. So pure culture, as Europe used to be as well. today lunatic and more lunatics. Love you Japan. The artwork is beautiful. Em·per·or (ĕm′pər-ər) n. 1. The male ruler of an empire. 2. a. The emperor butterfly. b. The emperor moth. c. The emperor penguin. [Middle English emperour, from Old French empereor, from Latin imperātor, from imperāre, to command: in-, in; see en- 1 + parāre, to prepare; see perə- in Indo-European roots. ] em′per·or·ship′ n. emperor ( ˈɛmpərə) n 1. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a monarch who rules or reigns over an empire 2. (Animals) Also called: emperor moth any of several large saturniid moths with eyelike markings on each wing, esp Saturnia pavonia of Europe. See also giant peacock moth [C13: from Old French empereor, from Latin imperātor commander-in-chief, from imperāre to command, from im- + parāre to make ready] ˈemperorˌship n em•per•or (ˈɛm pər ər) n. the male sovereign or supreme ruler of an empire. [1175–1225; < Old French empereor < Latin imperātor orig., one who gives orders, ruler = imperā(re) to order, command ( im- im - 1 + -perāre, comb. form of parāre to provide, prepare) + -tor -tor] em′per•or•ship`, n. Thesaurus Antonyms Related Words Synonyms Legend: Noun 1. emperor - the male ruler of an empire empress - a woman emperor or the wife of an emperor Holy Roman Emperor - sovereign of the Holy Roman Empire Kaiser - the title of the Holy Roman Emperors or the emperors of Austria or of Germany until 1918 mikado, tenno - the emperor of Japan; when regarded as a religious leader the emperor is called tenno Emperor of Rome, Roman Emperor - sovereign of the Roman Empire Romanoff, Romanov - a member of the imperial family that ruled Russia crowned head, monarch, sovereign - a nation's ruler or head of state usually by hereditary right 2. emperor - red table grape of California vinifera grape - grape from a cultivated variety of the common grape vine of Europe 3. emperor - large moth of temperate forests of Eurasia having heavily scaled transparent wings emperor moth, Saturnia pavonia saturniid, saturniid moth - large brightly colored and usually tropical moth; larvae spin silken cocoons genus Saturnia, Saturnia - type genus of the Saturniidae: emperor moth 4. emperor - large richly colored butterfly emperor butterfly brush-footed butterfly, four-footed butterfly, nymphalid, nymphalid butterfly - medium to large butterflies found worldwide typically having brightly colored wings and much-reduced nonfunctional forelegs carried folded on the breast Apatura, genus Apatura - large Old World butterflies Apatura iris, purple emperor - large European butterfly the male of which has wings shaded with purple emperor noun ruler, king, monarch, sovereign, lord, shah, kaiser, tsar, potentate, khan, mikado, imperator the coronation of Japan's new emperor Translations император цар emperador císař kejser imperiestro keiser keisari imperator császár kaisar keisari keisari; keisaraynja 皇帝 天皇 帝王 황제 imperator imperatorius imperators cisár cár cesar kejsare kaisari จักรพรรดิ hoàng đế emperor [ˈɛmp ə rə r] n → empereur m emperor ( ˈempərə) noun – feminine ˈempress – the head of an empire. Charlemagne was emperor of a large part of the world; the Emperor Napoleon. emperor → اِمْبراطور císař kejser Kaiser αυτοκράτορας emperador keisari empereur imperator imperatore 皇帝 황제 keizer keiser cesarz imperador император kejsare จักรพรรดิ imparator hoàng đế 皇帝.

Whowwweee. Cette chanson est formidable. Mon Deu... comment rester zen! Tres amazing. Merci beaucoup pour cette video. Movie online emperor city. Movie online emperor games. English [ edit] Alternative forms [ edit] emperour ( obsolete) Etymology [ edit] From Middle English emperour, borrowed from Anglo-Norman emperour and Old French empereor (Modern French empereur), from Latin imperātor ( “ emperor; commander ”), from imperāre ( “ to command ”). Doublet of imperator. Pronunciation [ edit] ( Received Pronunciation) IPA ( key): /ˈɛmpəɹə/, /ˈɛmpɹə/ ( General American) IPA ( key): /ˈɛmpəɹɚ/, /ˈɛmpɹɚ/ ( General New Zealand) IPA ( key): /ˈempɘɹɘ/, /ˈempɹɘ/ Noun [ edit] emperor ( plural emperors) The male monarch or ruler of an empire. (Can we date this quote by Sri Ramana Maharishi and provide title, author's full name, and other details? ) Even an emperor is no match for a man with no wants. Any monarch ruling an empire, irrespective of gender, with "empress" contrasting to mean when consort to emperor 1994 Het Spinhuis, Transactions: Essays in Honor of Jeremy F. Boissevain In 690 Wu usurped the throne and became Emperor herself, which proved a unique event in the history of China. 2002 The Heritage of World Civilizations: To 1700 page 226 After his death in 683 she ruled for seven years as regent and then, deposing her son, became emperor herself, the only woman in Chinese history to hold the title. 2008 Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe: Society in Transformation page 211 Empress, imperial regent, and even emperor herself (r. 797–802), Irene was an important and powerful figure at the Byzantine court in the late eighth and early ninth century. 2013 Voyages in World History page 213 Originally the wife of the emperor, she engineered the imperial succession so that she could serve first as regent to a boy emperor and then as emperor herself. 2016, Commander Pakydus, "Sindbad & the 7 Galaxies" Where is Sindbad? I have a summons for him direct from the galactic emperor herself. He is to be brought here immediately to give an explanation for his recent actions. ( political theory) Specifically, the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire; the world-monarch. The Investiture Controversy was a conflict between the Emperor and the Pope. The fourth trump or major arcana card of the tarot deck. A large, relatively valuable marble in children's games. 2001, Paul Webley, The economic psychology of everyday life, page 39: But marbles are not only used to play games: they are also traded. In this market, the value of the different kinds of marbles (oilies, emperors, etc. ) is determined by local supply and demand and not by the price of the marbles [ …] Any fish of the family Lethrinidae. ( entomology) Any various butterflies of the subfamily Charaxinae. Usage notes [ edit] An emperor is generally addressed as His Imperial Majesty. Hyponyms [ edit] barracks emperor Derived terms [ edit] [ edit] Translations [ edit] ruler of an empire Albanian: perandor (sq) m Arabic: قَيْصَر ‎ m ( qayṣar), إِمْبْرَاطُور ‎ m ( ʾimbrāṭūr) Armenian: կայսր (hy) ( kaysr) Old Armenian: կայսր ( kaysr), կեսար ( kesar) Aromanian: ampirat m Asturian: emperador m Azerbaijani: imperator Belarusian: імпера́тар m ( impjerátar), цар m ( car) ( tsar) Bengali: সম্রাট ( sômraṭ) Breton: impalaer (br) Bulgarian: импера́тор (bg) m ( imperátor) Burmese: ဧကရာဇ် (my) () Catalan: emperador (ca) m Chinese: Cantonese: 皇帝 ( wong 4 dai 3) Dungan: хуонди ( huondi), хуоншон ( huonšon) Mandarin: 皇帝 (zh) ( huángdì), 帝王 (zh) ( dìwáng), 天皇 (zh) ( tiānhuáng) ( of Japan), 皇上 (zh) ( huángshang) Czech: císař (cs) m Danish: kejser (da) c Dutch: keizer (nl) m Dzongkha: རྒྱལ་ཆེན ( rgyal chen) Esperanto: imperiestro Estonian: keiser (et), imperaator Extremaduran: emperaol m Finnish: keisari (fi) French: empereur (fr) m Friulian: imperadôr m Galician: emperador m Georgian: იმპერატორი ( imṗeraṭori) German: Kaiser (de) m, Imperator (de) m Greek: αυτοκράτορας (el) m ( aftokrátoras) Ancient: αὐτοκράτωρ m ( autokrátōr), καῖσαρ m ( kaîsar), αὐτάναξ m ( autánax) Hebrew: קיסר קֵיסָר ‎ (he) m ( kesár, keysár) Hindi: सम्राट m ( samrāṭ) Hungarian: császár (hu) Icelandic: keisari (is) m Ido: cezaro (io), imperiestro (io) Indonesian: kaisar (id), maharaja (id) Interlingua: imperator Irish: impire m Italian: imperatore (it) m Japanese: 皇帝 (ja) ( こうてい, kōtei) ( emperor in general), 帝王 (ja) ( ていおう, teiō) ( general term for emperor or monarch), 天皇 (ja) ( てんのう, tennō) ( emperor of Japan) Kazakh: император ( ïmperator) Khmer: អធិរាជ (km) ( ʾaʾthiriəc), រាជាធិរាជ ( riəciə thiriəc), សម្រាជ (km) ( sɑmraac) Korean: 황제 (ko) ( hwangje), 천황 (ko) ( cheonhwang) (of Japan) Kurdish: Kurmanji: emperator (ku), qeyser (ku) Kyrgyz: император (ky) ( imperator) Lao: ຈັກກະພັດ ( chak ka phat), ຈັກກະວັດ ( chak ka wat), ນໍຣິນ ( nǭ rin), ນໍລິນ ( nǭ lin), ຣາເຊນ ( rā sēn) Latin: imperātor (la) m Latvian: imperators m, ķeizars m Lithuanian: imperatorius m, ciesorius m Low German: German Low German: Kaiser Luxembourgish: Keeser m Macedonian: импера́тор m ( imperátor), цар m ( car) ( tsar) Malay: kaisar, maharaja, khakan Malayalam: സാമ്രാട്ട് ( sāmrāṭṭŭ) Mandinka: mansa Manx: ard-ree m Maori: emepara, epara Marathi: सम्राट m ( samrāṭ) Middle English: emperour Mongolian: эзэн хаан ( ezen haan) Norman: empéreu m ( Jersey) Norwegian: Bokmål: keiser (no) m Nynorsk: keisar m Occitan: emperador (oc) m Old Occitan: emperador Old English: cāsere m Persian: امپراطور ‎ (fa) ( emperâtor) Polish: imperator (pl) m, cesarz (pl) m Portuguese: imperador (pt) m Punjabi: ਸਮਰਾਟ (pa) ( samrāṭ) Quechua: qhapaq Romanian: împărat (ro) m Romansch: imperatur m, imperataur m, imperatour m, caiser m Russian: импера́тор (ru) m ( imperátor), царь (ru) m ( carʹ) ( tsar) Sanskrit: अधिराज (sa) m ( adhirāja), सम्राज् (sa) m ( samrāj) Scottish Gaelic: ìmpire m Serbo-Croatian: Cyrillic: ца̏р m, импѐра̄тор m, це̏са̄р m Latin: cȁr (sh) m, impèrātor (sh) m, cȅsār (sh) m Sicilian: mpiraturi Slovak: cisár (sk) m, cár (sk) m ( of Russia, Bulgaria) Slovene: cêsar (sl) m, imperátor m Sorbian: Lower Sorbian: kejžor m Upper Sorbian: kejžor m Spanish: emperador (es) m Swahili: kaisari Swedish: kejsare (sv) c Tagalog: baginda, emperador (tl) Tajik: император ( imperator) Telugu: చక్రవర్తి (te) ( cakravarti) Thai: จักรพรรดิ ( jàk-grà-pát), ฮ่องเต้ ( hɔ̂ng-dtêe) ( emperor of China) Turkish: imparator (tr), ilhan (tr) Turkmen: imperator Ukrainian: імпера́тор m ( imperátor), цар (uk) m ( car) ( tsar) Urdu: سمراٹ ‎ m ( samrāṭ) Uzbek: imperator (uz) Venetian: inperadore m, inperador m Vietnamese: hoàng đế (vi), thiên hoàng ( of Japan) Vilamovian: kazer m Walloon: impreur (wa) m Welsh: ymerawdwr m Yiddish: קייסער ‎ m ( keyser), אימפּעראַטאָר ‎ m ( imperator) fourth trump or major arcana card Anagrams [ edit] per orem.

Emperor, feminine empress, title designating the sovereigns of the ancient Roman Empire and, by derivation, various later European rulers; it is also applied loosely to certain non-European monarchs. Read More on This Topic ancient Rome: Cult of the emperors Among the institutions most important in softening the edges of regional differences was the cult of the emperors. In one sense, it originated… In republican Rome ( c. 509–27 bc), imperator denoted a victorious general, so named by his troops or by the Senate. Under the empire (after 27 bc), it was regularly adopted by the ruler as a forename and gradually came to apply to his office. In medieval times, Charlemagne, king of the Franks and of the Lombards, was crowned emperor by Pope Leo III in Rome on Christmas Day, 800. Thenceforward until the fall of Constantinople in 1453 there were two emperors in the Christian world, the Byzantine and the Western. The term “Holy Roman emperor” is now generally used, for convenience, to designate the Western sovereigns, though the title was at first simply “emperor” ( imperator; the German form kaiser being derived from the Roman caesar), then “august emperor, ” then, from 971, “Roman emperor. ” The addition of “Holy” to the designation of the emperor, in historical writing, follows from its having been added to that of the empire ( sacrum imperium, 1157). The dissolution of Frankish Europe into separate kingdoms led eventually to the imperial title’s passing in 962 to the East Frankish or German king Otto I, who was also king of Italy (the kingdom of Burgundy was further acquired by Conrad II in 1032). Thenceforward to 1806, though not all German kings were emperors (crowned by the pope), there were no emperors who were not German kings, so that election to the German kingship came to be de facto necessary for attainment of the imperial title—with the final result that from 1508 to 1806 the style “emperor elected” or, more briefly, “emperor” was given to the German king in anticipation of his coronation by the pope (only one such coronation, that of Charles V in 1530, actually took place in the period). Get exclusive access to content from our 1768 First Edition with your subscription. Subscribe today Outside the Frankish and German sphere of influence the title emperor was sometimes assumed by princes supreme over more than one kingdom: thus Sancho III the Great of Navarre styled himself “emperor of Spain” on his annexation of Léon (1034); Alfonso VI of Léon and Castile called himself “emperor of the Two Religions, ” to show his supremacy over Christians and Muslims alike; and Alfonso VII took the title “emperor of all Spain” (1135). The Russian tsar Peter I the Great assumed the title imperator on Oct. 22, 1721. From that point on male rulers were conventionally called tsar, whereas female rulers were always called empress; both males and females held both titles, i. e., tsar (or tsaritsa) and imperator (or imperatritsa). After the French Revolution had destroyed the kingdom of France, Napoleon Bonaparte in 1804, having been anointed by Pope Pius VII, crowned himself emperor of the French as Napoleon I. His claim to be the successor not of Louis XIV but of Charlemagne, together with his organization of the Confederation of the Rhine in Germany, was a threat to the Holy Roman Empire of the Habsburg dynasty. Seeing this, Francis II, to retain an imperial title, took that of “hereditary emperor of Austria ” before he dissolved the old empire in 1806. His successors retained it until 1918. Napoleon III was emperor of the French from 1852 until his deposition in 1870–71 (the French Second Empire). Between 1871 and 1918 the kings of Prussia —William I, Frederick III, and William II— were German emperors, or kaisers. Victoria of Great Britain took the title empress of India in 1876, but her great-grandson George VI renounced the imperial title when India became independent. In the Western Hemisphere Jean-Jacques Dessalines was emperor of Haiti from 1804 to 1806; princes of the house of Bragança were emperors of Brazil from 1822 to 1889; Agustín de Iturbide and the Austrian archduke Maximilian were emperors of Mexico from 1822 to 1823 and from 1864 to 1867, respectively. The title emperor also is generally and loosely used as the English designation for the sovereigns of Ethiopia and of Japan, for the Mogul rulers of India, for the former sovereigns of China, for the Inca rulers of Peru, and for the Aztec rulers of Mexico. Learn More in these related Britannica articles: Among the institutions most important in softening the edges of regional differences was the cult of the emperors. In one sense, it originated in the 4th century bc, when Alexander the Great first received veneration by titles and symbols and forms of address as… history of Europe: The empire …house was also Holy Roman emperor. He directly ruled the family lands, comprising different parts of Austria stretching from Alpine valleys to the Danubian plain, which were mainly Roman Catholic and German; Bohemia, Moravia, and Silesia, which were mainly Slavic in race and language; a fraction of Hungary after the… history of Europe: Late antiquity: the reconfiguration of the Roman world In the 3rd century the emperor, who was first called princeps (“first citizen”) and then dominus (“lord”), became divus (“divine”). The powerful religious connotations of the imperial office were adopted even by usurpers of the imperial throne, backed by their armies, who then ruled autocratically at the head of a….

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We should talk about your fitness as a parent, father Meanwhile the emperor is wondering why one of his labrat is questioning him. Uriah needs to debate Magnus. I feel like the debate between a former deamon prince and a chaos priest would be absolutely legendary. 36:47 please. If Brendon looked like this if he went to hell, then I want to go to hell just so I can hang with him.

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Palpatine is behind it all. Jangan terlalu lah abang* kasian publik nya😂 next custom evos reborn vs evos new roaster bang jo. The legion of his best troops got defeated by midget bears. Emperador movie online latino. This is a list including all rulers who had carried the title of emperor through history. Emperors of traditional empires [ edit] Ancient empires [ edit] Persian Empire (559 BC–330 BC)—see List of kings of Persia Hellenistic Empire (331 BC–301 BC)—see Alexander the Great and Diadochi Mauryan Empire (321 BC–185 BC)—see Mauryan dynasty China Empire (221 BC–1911)—see Table of Chinese monarchs Funan (68–550)—see List of Kings of Cambodia Roman Empire (27 BC–476)—see List of Roman Emperors Ethiopia (Empire ca. 3rd century–1975)—see Emperor of Ethiopia, Rulers and heads of state of Ethiopia, and Kings of Axum Middle Ages [ edit] Western and Byzantine traditions [ edit] Byzantine Empire (395–1453)—see List of Byzantine Emperors —and its rival & split-offs, Latin Empire of Constantinople (1204–1261, with the title of (Latin) "Emperor of Constantinople" continuing to 1383) Empire of Nicaea (1204–1261)—"Byzantine Empire" in exile during the rule of the "Latin Empire" over Constantinople. Empire of Trebizond (1204–1461)—Another split of the "Byzantine Empire" Empire of Thessalonica (1224–1242)—Offshoot of the Despotate of Epirus, reduced to vassal status of other powers after 1230 Ottoman Empire (1299–1922)—see Ottoman dynasty Carolingian Empire (800–843, 884–888) Holy Roman Empire (891–1806)—see List of Holy Roman Emperors West Francia (875–877, 881–887)–see List of French monarchs Bulgaria ( Empire 913–1422)—see List of Bulgarian monarchs Serbia ( Empire 1345–1371)—see Emperor of Serbia Muscovy (Empire 1547–1721)—see List of Russian rulers —continued in Imperial Russia from 1721 (see below) Asian [ edit] Japan (monarchs known as tenno from 7th century CE)—see Emperor of Japan and List of Emperors of Japan Korean Empire (1897–1910)—see Emperor of Korea Chola Empire (300–1279)—see List of Tamil monarchs Chenla (550–802)—see List of Kings of Cambodia The first ruler of Vietnam to take the title of Emperor (Hoang De) was the founder of the Dinh Dynasty, Dinh Bo Linh, in the year AD 966—see List of Vietnamese dynasties Khmer Empire (802–1431)—see List of Kings of Cambodia Mongol Empire (1206–1634)—see List of Mongol Khans Persian Empire ( Iran) (1501–1979)—see List of kings of Persia Mughal Empire (1526–1857)—see List of Mughal emperors Durrani Empire (1747–1823) Talpur dynasty (1783–1843) Americas [ edit] Aztec Empire (1375–1521)—see Hueyi Tlatoani Inca Empire (1438–1533)—see Sapa Inca Pre-modern Empire [ edit] Spanish Empire was the first world-wide empire in history, (1492–1898) with its maximum expansion between 1520 and 1700 reaching 31 million square kilometers Austrian Empire, 1804–1867 and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, 1867–1918 as Emperor of Austria (both under the Habsburgs) British Empire de jure 1877–1947 India (under the British Raj with British Monarch as Emperor of India, 1876–1947) Third Bulgarian Tsardom (internationally equivalent to a kingdom, 1908–1946)—see list of Bulgarian monarchs Empire of Brazil ( Pedro I, 1822–1831 and Pedro II, 1831–1889)—see Brazilian imperial family France: (under the Bonapartes, 1804–1814, 1815; 1852–1870)—see Emperor of the French First French Empire ( Napoleon I, 1804–1814, 1815) Second French Empire ( Napoleon III, 1852–1870) German Empire (under the Hohenzollern dynasty as German Emperors, 1871–1918) Russian Empire (under the Romanovs, 1721–1917)—see list of Russian rulers Emperors of short-lived "empires" [ edit] Emperor Jacques I of the Empire of Haiti (1804–1806) Emperor Augustine of the first Mexican Empire (1822–1823) Emperor Faustin I of the Empire of Haiti (1849–1859) Emperor Maximilian of the second Mexican Empire (1864–1867) Emperor Sylvain I of the Empire of Haiti (1868–1870, not confirmed [1]) Emperors Sunjong and Gojong of the Korean Empire (1897–1910) The Hongxian Emperor of the Empire of China (1915–1916) Emperor Puyi of the Empire of Manchuria (1934–1945) Emperor Bảo Đại of the Empire of Vietnam (1945) Emperor Bokassa I of the Central African Empire (1976–1979) Self-proclaimed "emperors" [ edit] See also Self-proclaimed monarchy and micronation Simeon Uroš, "Emperor of Serbs and Greeks" (held by Uroš V), in reality Despot of Epirus and Thessaly (1359–1369) John Uroš, "Emperor of Serbs and Greeks", in reality Despot of Thessaly (1369–1373) Jovan Nenad, "Emperor of Serbs" (1526–1527) Paul of Smederevo, "Serb Emperor" (1560s) Joshua Abraham Norton “Emperor of the United States of America” (1858–1889) Fictional emperors [ edit] This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. ( January 2014) Galactic Empire (Isaac Asimov) Emperor Sheev Palpatine of the First Galactic Empire (19BBY-4ABY) Emperor Karl Franz, of the Empire of the Warhammer Fantasy franchise See Category of fictional emperors and empresses.

When you're lost in a black forest near Mordor. Imagine manipulating your way through the Senate, the Jedi Council, Grand Master Yoda himself and Darth Vader, the Chosen One, to deceivingly come back with one grand plan, only to get killed by your measly granddaughter who hasn't even trained for more than a week. Naughty naughty.

 

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