imperial
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++im·pe·ri·al /ɪmˈpɪəriəl $ -ˈpɪr-/ adjective [only before noun] 1 PGCOUNTRY/NATIONrelating to an empire or to the person who rules it 帝国的;皇帝的 Britain’s imperial expansion in the 19th century 19世纪英帝国的扩张2. TMrelating to the system of weights and measurements based on pounds, inches, miles etc 英制的〔以磅、英寸、英里等为基本度量衡单位的制度〕
Examples from the Corpus
imperial• Without a territorial base the papacy could not be independent of imperial and other influences.• The second, the Code, consisted of the imperial constitutions and edicts.• History is full of attempts at imperial domination.• Perhaps the sight of his footlocker had provoked her-a white man moving in to bombard the local ovaries with blue-eyed imperial genes.• Those who favour a depiction of the fortunes of the imperial house have to reckon with the difficulty of recognising Augustus.• the imperial jewels• Second, it shows how in antiquity an absolute imperial monarch used the arts to bolster his rule.• Unlike many of his time Charlemagne had the skill of writing, as in his imperial signature on a document dated 775.• But he would not break with tradition, for he knew that innovation would bring down his imperial structure.Origin imperial (1300-1400) French Late Latin imperialis, from Latin imperium “command, empire”im·pe·ri·al adjectiveChineseSyllable
relating or to an to empire person the Corpus who
imperial
im‧pe‧ri‧al /ɪmˈpɪəriəl $ -ˈpɪr-/
adjective [only before noun]
Britain’s imperial expansion in the 19th century
2. relating to the system of weights and measurements based on pounds, inches, miles etc
im‧pe‧ri‧al /ɪmˈpɪəriəl $ -ˈpɪr-/
adjective [only before noun] Date: 1300-1400
Language: French
Origin: Late Latin imperialis, from Latin imperium 'command, empire'
1. relating to an empire or to the person who rules it:Language: French
Origin: Late Latin imperialis, from Latin imperium 'command, empire'
2. relating to the system of weights and measurements based on pounds, inches, miles etc