Meaning of reginacide | Babel Free
Definitions
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One who kills a queen. countable, uncommon
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The killing of a queen (female monarch or wife of a king). countable, uncommon, uncountable
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The killing of a queen (reproductive female insect). countable, uncommon, uncountable
Equivalents
Français
réginicide
Examples
“However, my old enemy, Miss [Edith] Sitwell, is now enthroned. I was not at the coronation, I am not among her subjects. But I have no inclination left to be a reginacide or even a jeering republican.”
“Another report connects the incident with the trial of the would-be reginacide John Somervyle (1 Anderson 106).”
“Touring Ghana with Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II (next page), His High Dedication Kwame Nkrumah—that is his title—has learned that the image of a true queen is not easily removed from the hearts of ex-colonial Africans. Increasingly unpopular because of his police-state methods, Nkrumah used the queen’s visit as a pretext to jail dozens of his political opponents as would-be reginacides.”
“George Henderson has proposed recently that Guthlac’s hasty retreat to Repton in 697 could be explained by his early secular career having been brought to an abrupt end by an involvement in the murder of Queen Osthryth of Mercia (wife of King Æthelred) that same year – the two events appear together in the annal entry for 697 in the Worcester Chronicle. Henderson would interpret Guthlac’s sudden discovery of a religious vocation as a means of escaping a worse fate when retribution was sought for the queen’s death. Presumably Guthlac’s retreat to the fenlands could then be seen as a form of political exile not unlike that of Æthelbald, and in this context Henderson draws attention to the attempted assassination of Guthlac by Beccel as perhaps being not so much a hagiographical motif as a real attempt by the Mercian regime to take revenge on a reginacide.”
“The tales depicted are from the Old and New Testaments but the faces and clothes are of sixteenth-century England. Henry [VIII] himself appears, his face attached to the persona of King Solomon, who receives gifts from the Queen of Sheba. Was that the artists’ cheeky prank? Or their flattering of the fearful, forty-inch-chest reginacide?”
“[A sketch of Edward Oxford’s attempted assassination of Queen Victoria.]”
“It is related that once upon a time in a small room of a large house three little girls were seated. They were pretty, they were poor, and they were princesses. Before them stood a fat man with a white beard. […] To the first he said: You will be a duchess and be burned to death. To the second: You will be a queen and fly for your life. To the third: You will be an empress and go mad on your throne. […] In any event, though the astrologer may have foreseen regalias, he could not foretell the reginacide.”
“In view of the permission of reginacide in Pius V’s excommunication of Elizabeth I (Regnans in excelsis, 1570), most English Protestants (and Wesley with them) were convinced that Roman Catholics were disloyal citizens, ex professo.”
“When I saw the size of the bruise under her whiteface, I had to be restrained from storming Blachernae and committing reginacide.”
“But the wasps make no such migration. The males and the old queens and workers all die when the autumn frosts set in, while the young queens, which have yet to lay their eggs, hie away to find protection in some quiet nook, where they remain until the first bright days of spring. It is then that they sally forth in search of a suitable place to commence their nests, and frequently fall victims to some one who destroys them as depredators of fruit and progenitors of countless enemies of humanity. Should any of my hearers ever be induced to commit such a regicide, or rather reginacide, I beg they will remember that the insect itself and its offspring, if allowed to survive, would remove from both field and garden incalculable numbers of small caterpillars and other larvæ which are so harmful to vegetation.”
“How can I “sprinkle peppermint on the bees” between the frames of the hive? I suppose I am to move them all from their places in order to do it, and I must also more them in order to find the queen and commit reginacide.”
“On page 297 [“Queens Not Balled Thru Robbers”], that quotation from a foreign bee-paper, about the foolishness of thinking that robber-bees ball a queen, is probably all right in the main. Robbers are indeed there for honey—not for reginacide—but perchance no one interferes, and after awhile the honey is gone, and the hive is filled with a miscellaneous crowd largely new comers, who are like a city mob, “the more part know not wherefore they are come together.””
“Whenever a Florida home-owner sees a small crater-like opening with a mound around it in the soil on his property he will treat the area with fire-ant poison which will clear up the area, but the fire-ants move to an adjacent area. The loyal fire-ant soldiers will immediately bring home the poison to feed their queen. Little do they realize that they are committing reginacide, or queen-killing! Unwittingly they are murdering their mother.”
CEFR level
B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.