royal

From LSJ

ὀρχούμενός τις καὶ τὴν τοῦ Κρόνου τεκνοφαγίαν παρωρχεῖτο → a dancer was presenting Kronos who devoured his children, an actor portrayed Kronos who devoured his children

Source

English > Greek (Woodhouse)

Woodhouse page for royal - Opens in new window

adjective

P. and V. βασιλικός, ἀρχικός, βασίλειος (Thuc. 1, 132), τυραννικός, V. τύραννος.

magnificent: P. and V. σεμνός; see magnificent.

Translations

Albanian: mbretëror; Arabic: مَلَكِيّ‎, قَيْصَرِيّ‎; Aragonese: reyal; Armenian: արքայական, թագավորական; Aromanian: vãsilchescu; Azerbaijani: kral; Basque: erregeren, errege-; Belarusian: каралеўскі, царскі; Bulgarian: кралски, царски; Catalan: reial; Chinese Mandarin: 王室的, 王的; Czech: královský; Danish: royal, kongelig; Dutch: koninklijk; Esperanto: reĝa; Estonian: kuninglik; Extremaduran: rial; Faroese: kongligur, kongaligur, konguligur; Finnish: kuninkaallinen; French: royal, royale; Georgian: მეფის, მეფური, სამეფო; German: königlich; Gothic: 𐍂𐌴𐌹𐌺𐌴𐌹𐍃; Greek: βασιλικός; Ancient Greek: βασιλικός; Hebrew: מַלְכוּתִי‎; Hungarian: királyi; Icelandic: konunglegur; Ido: rejala; Indonesian: diraja; Irish: ríoga; Italian: reale, regale; Japanese: 王の, 王室の; Kazakh: корольдық; Khmer: រាជ; Korean: 왕실의, 왕의; Latin: regius, regalis; Latvian: karalisks, ķēnišķīgs; Leonese: reyal; Lithuanian: karališkas; Macedonian: кралски, царски; Malay: diraja; Malayalam: രാജകീയ; Middle English: royal; Norman: rouoya; Norwegian Bokmål: kongelig; Nynorsk: kongeleg; Old English: cyne-, cynelīċ; Old French: roial; Old Occitan: reial; Persian: شایگان‎, شاهانه‎, سلطنتی‎; Polish: królewski; Portuguese: real; Romanian: regal, regală; Russian: королевский, царский; Sanskrit: राज्य; Scottish Gaelic: rìoghail; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: краљевскӣ, ца̑рскӣ; Roman: králjevskī, cȃrskī; Slovak: kráľovský; Slovene: kraljev, knežji; Spanish: real; Swedish: kunglig; Tajik: шоҳӣ, подшоҳӣ, шоҳона; Thai: ราช; Turkish: kraliyet; Ukrainian: королі́вський, царський; Uzbek: qirol, podsho; Vietnamese: hoàng gia, quí tộc; Volapük: regik, hiregik, jiregik; Welsh: brenhinol; Yiddish: קעניגלעך