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Meaning of autocratess | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1

Definitions

A female autocrat.

archaic

Examples

“On all of these vessels is the following inscription: “By the most high and god-loving order of the most pious great Gosudarina Catharine II., Empress and Autocratess of all Russia, this vessel was made to be used for the boiling of the holy oil, in the sixth year of her majesty’s prosperous reign, and from the birth of Christ the Saviour, the 1767th year.””
“Who has not heard of Melonia, widow Coutts and Duchess of St. Albans, that spirited great personage, Autocratess of Madeira, Countess of Nantz and Baroness Cogniac,—who as well as the late more severely virtuous Countess of Derby, the less oftener engaged in her time, but ever engaging Miss Brunton, Countess Dowager of Craven, and some other peeresses of equal celebrity we all know walked the ſtage for several years to the delight both of ruſtic and metropolitan audiences.”
“But it is precisely because he is too far removed from the English, both by that native amiability which continually gains an involuntary conquest over his ‘Anglo manie’, and by his German cordiality, that he excites their envy rather than their admiration; and though ‘recherché’ by most, because he is the fashion, remains a strange meteor in their system, whom they attack where they can, and whom, at all events, they cannot take to their hearts as they do their own Jupiter Ammon, nor acknowledge in him ‘autorité sans replique’ with that blind submission they pay to their Autocratess.”
“It was the fashion to be a member of the Omnibus, because the numbers were limited—because it enabled a man to cut his mother’s family box, to get rid of his wife’s set, or to have a house of refuge against the necessity of occupying his own high-paid place in the box of some autocratess of fashion, to which it is a distinction to subscribe and a bore to be confined.”
“The wives and daughters of the oldest provincial gentry, with pedigrees traced up to the Heptarchy, have been seen humbling themselves by the lowest acts of degradation to soften the obdurate autocratesses; […]”
“Russia, indeed, made rapid progress in arts, civilization, and power, under autocrats and autocratesses that were libertines in practice, and infidels in principle.”
“Much has been said of the “despotism of the autocratesses,” of their personal dislikes, political biases, individual prejudices and partialities.”
“[…] we believe, without attributing too much greatness and spirit to Pitt, that he would not, upon any paltry conditions, have permitted a repetition of the disgraceful scenes of 1772-3, nor have made England stand by a quiet spectatress while Russia established a maritime influence in the Archipelago, and thereby dismembered the Ottoman empire. If there were any predilections in favour of the autocratess they were nourished rather by Fox than by Pitt.”
“As the close of the seventeenth century saw those who were considered as pre-eminently the guardians and champions of civil and religious liberty the foremost in imposing restrictions and penalties upon the Roman Catholics, and as the early part of the present century saw the same great party, with all its free and popular principles, the systematic apologists, if not admirers, of the tyranny of Napoleon Bonaparte, so the latter part of the last saw the same Whigs courting the friendship of the Russian Autocratess Catherine, and discountenancing the emancipation of Spanish America.”
““What has become of the gallant Colonel? I have not seen him this age.” / “Gone to the Antipodes!” was the reply of the autocratess of the Reynolds family, who was very fond of sending her enemies into exile.”
“Just, however, as we were seating ourselves, Lady Holland called out from the opposite side of the table, “No, no, ladies, I can’t allow that; I must have Mrs. Butler by me, if you please.” Thus challenged, I could not, without making a scene with Lady Holland, and beginning the poet’s banquet with a shock to everybody present, refuse her very dictatorial behest; and therefore I left my friendly neighbor, Lady ⸺, and went round to the place assigned me by the imperious autocratess of the dinner-table: between herself and Dr. Allen (“the gentle infidel,” “Lady Holland’s atheist,” as he was familiarly called by her familiars).”
“Autocratesses, forgive my heat, / But isn’t it time to change that stuff? / Small is the benison I entreat — / Why don’t they ever have spoons enough?”
“It must be obvious to every reader that if state and federal officials with the chief of the Food Research Laboratory as autocrat (or autocratess) can formulate and carry out this policy, there is absolutely no limit to the possibilities of their interference with distribution and production at any and every stage.”
“If we said you and your brother and sister members of the educational autocracy were inclined to be piggish in trying to shove this ten-mill amendment through at this time, wouldn’t we be as polite as you are, and somewhat more truthful / Well, we will forgive you. We are used to being called names—in fact, we sometimes call ourself more names in a minute than you could think up in a week. And we ain’t going to call you and the other educational autocrats—particularly the autocratesses—any names, either.”
““I resent anyone making up my mind but my wife,” said a burly friend of mine to me one day. That remark opens up a large field for discussing domestic autocratesses so dangerous that I’m glad it’s the end of this column.”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.

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