Associations to the word «Prince»
Noun
- Bishopric
- Saxe
- Anhalt
- Conti
- Asturias
- Highness
- Rupert
- Liechtenstein
- Consort
- Princess
- Crown
- Principality
- Archduke
- Wales
- Leopold
- Nassau
- Elector
- Bourbon
- Princesse
- Maximilian
- Hesse
- Cinderella
- Savoy
- Mirza
- Andrei
- Prussia
- Edward
- Dowager
- Bernhard
- Albert
- Throne
- Duc
- Philipp
- Schleswig
- Pretender
- Novgorod
- Princes
- Sigismund
- Bremen
- Heir
- Bavaria
- Holstein
- Transylvania
- Duke
- Liang
- Empress
- Orange
- Regent
- Eugen
- Duchess
- Bismarck
- Bel
- Bonnie
- Ferdinand
- Au
- Rus
- Haiti
- Parma
- Kiev
- Eldest
- Frederick
- Casimir
- Gao
- Bin
- Jacobite
- Camilla
- Emperor
- Regency
- Bohemia
- Tsar
- Vassal
- Mecklenburg
- Liu
- Persia
- Wei
- Khalid
- Wessex
- Anjou
- Palatine
- Wilhelm
- Friedrich
- Hanover
- Brunswick
- Claus
- Sovereign
- Helium
- Saxony
- Li
Adverb
Wiktionary
PRINCE, noun. (now archaic or historical) A (male) ruler, a sovereign; a king, monarch. [from 13th c.]
PRINCE, noun. (obsolete) A female monarch.
PRINCE, noun. Someone who is preeminent in their field; a great person. [from 13th c.]
PRINCE, noun. The (male) ruler or head of a principality. [from 14th c.]
PRINCE, noun. A male member of a royal family other than the ruler; especially (in the United Kingdom) the son or grandson of the monarch. [from 14th c.]
PRINCE, noun. A non-royal high title of nobility, especially in France and the Holy Roman Empire.
PRINCE, noun. A common name of the mushroom Agaricus augustus.
PRINCE, noun. A type of court card used in Tarot cards, the equivalent to the Jack.
PRINCE, proper noun. The title of a prince.
PRINCE, proper noun. A surname for someone who acted like a prince, or played the part in a pageant, or served in the household of a prince.
PRINCE, proper noun. A male given name in occasional use.
PRINCE ALBERT, proper noun. A community in Nova Scotia, Canada.
PRINCE ALBERT, proper noun. A city in Saskatchewan, Canada.
PRINCE ALBERT, noun. A piercing through the glans penis. Abbreviation: PA
PRINCE ALBERT COAT, noun. A double-breasted frock coat.
PRINCE BISHOP, noun. A bishop who also holds a secular princely rank, regardless whether its territory concurs wholly or partially with his diocese.
PRINCE CHARLES FORELAND, proper noun. An island of Svalbard.
PRINCE CHARLIE JACKET, noun. A formal Scottish jacket, normally worn with a kilt
PRINCE CHARLIE JACKETS, noun. Plural of Prince Charlie jacket
PRINCE CHARMING, noun. A fictional heroic prince in various fairy-tales.
PRINCE CHARMING, noun. (by extension) A heterosexual woman's prototypical ideal romantic partner, especially but not necessarily if he embodies common characteristics of the fictional princes, such as being courageous or chivalrous.
PRINCE CHARMINGS, noun. Plural of Prince Charming.
PRINCE CONSORT, noun. The husband of a queen regnant who is not himself a king in his own right.
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, proper noun. A province in eastern Canada which has Charlottetown as its capital.
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, proper noun. An island in eastern Canada, which forms the majority of the eponymous province
PRINCE EDWARD ISLANDER, noun. A native or inhabitant of Prince Edward Island, Canada.
PRINCE EDWARD ISLANDERS, noun. Plural of Prince Edward Islander
PRINCE OF DARKNESS, proper noun. Satan; the Devil
PRINCE OF DEMONS, proper noun. (theology) Satan.
PRINCE OF PEACE, proper noun. (Christianity) Jesus
PRINCE OF WALES, proper noun. A royal title given to the heir apparent to the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
PRINCE REGENT, noun. A prince who rules a monarchy in the capacity of a regent who is unfit to rule for whatever reason
PRINCE RUPERT'S METAL, noun. A type of alpha brass used as imitation gold.
PRINCE VALIANT, noun. (US) A hairstyle similar to a longer pageboy
Dictionary definition
PRINCE, noun. A male member of a royal family other than the sovereign (especially the son of a sovereign).
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.