Noun
reign (plural reigns)
- The exercise of sovereign power.
England prospered under Elizabeth I's reign.
2020 December 6, Xin Yan, “The Seemingly Impossible Is Possible”, in Minghui:Throughout history, no single dictator has successfully upheld their reign forever, no matter how powerful they seemed to be.
- The period during which a monarch rules.
The reign of Victoria was a long one.
- The territory or sphere over which a kingdom; empire; realm; dominion, etc. is ruled.
Translations
the exercise of sovereign power
- Aghwan: 𐕞𐕡𐕀𐔼𐕆𐔴𐕚𐕒𐕡𐕎 (üwxihesun)
- Albanian: balltim
- Arabic: حُكْم (ar) m (ḥukm)
- Hijazi Arabic: حُكُم m (ħukum)
- Armenian: թագավորում (hy) (tʻagavorum), թագավորություն (hy) (tʻagavorutʻyun)
- Bulgarian: царуване (bg) n (caruvane)
- Burmese: please add this translation if you can
- Catalan: regnat (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: please add this translation if you can
- Czech: vláda (cs)
- Dutch: troon (nl) m, bestuur (nl) n, heerschappij (nl) f
- Esperanto: regado
- Finnish: hallituskausi, valta-aika
- French: règne (fr) m
- Galician: reinado m
- Georgian: მეფობა (mepoba)
- German: Herrschaft (de) f, Regentschaft f
- Hungarian: uralom (hu)
- Irish: réim f
- Italian: regno (it) m
- Japanese: please add this translation if you can
- Khmer: រាជ្យ (km) (riəc)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: فەرمان ڕەوایەتی (ferman rewayetî)
- Latgalian: vaļdeit, kienēt
- Latvian: valdīt
- Lingala: konza
- Lithuanian: valdyti
- Norwegian: maktutøvelse m
- Old English: rīċe n
- Polish: rządy (pl)
- Portuguese: reinado (pt) m
- Russian: правле́ние (ru) n (pravlénije), ца́рствование (ru) (cárstvovanije), верховная власть (verxovnaja vlastʹ), властвование (ru) (vlastvovanije)
- Sanskrit: please add this translation if you can
- Slovene: vladavina (sl) f
- Spanish: reinado (es) m
- Swedish: regering (sv) c, maktutövning
- Thai: please add this translation if you can
- Turkish: devir (tr)
- Welsh: teyrnasiad m
- Yiddish: הערשאַפֿט f (hershaft)
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the period during which a monarch rules
Translations to be checked
Verb
reign (third-person singular simple present reigns, present participle reigning, simple past and past participle reigned)
- (intransitive) To exercise sovereign power, to rule as a monarch.
He reigned in an autocratic manner.
c. 1587–1588, [Christopher Marlowe], Tamburlaine the Great. […] The First Part […], 2nd edition, part 1, London: […] [R. Robinson for] Richard Iones, […], published 1592, →OCLC; reprinted as Tamburlaine the Great (A Scolar Press Facsimile), Menston, Yorkshire, London: Scolar Press, 1973, →ISBN, Act I, scene ii:Both we will raigne as Conſuls of the earth,
And mightie kings ſhall be our Senators.
- (transitive, rare, nonstandard) To reign over (a country)
2007, Anna Chilewska, Writing after the gaze: the rupture of the historical:The House of Piast reigned Poland from its foundation to 1385.
- To be the winner of the most recent iteration of a competition.
- To be a dominant quality of a place or situation; to prevail, predominate, rule.
Silence reigned.
1936, F.J. Thwaites, The Redemption, Sydney: H. John Edwards Publishing, published 1940, page 58:Silence reigned, broken only by the hideous screeching of vultures and the sound of a lawn-mower being used in the hospital grounds.
2007, Richard Bawden, “Redesigning Animal Agriculture: a Systemic Perspective”, in David L. Swain, Ed Charmley, John Steel, Shaun Coffey, editors, Redesigning Animal Agriculture: The Challenge of the 21st Century, CABI, page 1:Unfortunately – and ironically – the word ‘system’ itself is used in such a wide variety of contexts within animal science, as indeed it is in virtually every domain of human activity, that confusion reigns about what a systems-oriented research programme actually looks like and what systems-oriented animal scientists actually do.
Translations
be the winner of the most recent iteration of a competition
be a dominant quality of a place or situation