Sovereign vs Ringer - What's the difference?
sovereign | ringer | Related terms |
Exercising power of rule.
Exceptional in quality.
Extremely potent or effective (of a medicine, remedy etc.).
* 1590 , (Edmund Spenser), (The Faerie Queene) , III.v:
* (rfdate) Dryden
* (rfdate) South
Having supreme, ultimate power.
Princely; royal.
* (rfdate) Shakespeare
Predominant; greatest; utmost; paramount.
* (rfdate) Hooker
A monarch; the ruler of a country.
* Jefferson
One who is not a subject to a ruler or nation.
A gold coin of the United Kingdom, with a nominal value of one pound sterling but in practice used as a bullion coin.
A very large champagne bottle with the capacity of about 25 liters, equivalent to 33? standard bottles.
Any butterfly of the tribe , as the (ursula) and the viceroy.
Someone who rings, especially a bell ringer.
* 1863 , ,
(mining) A crowbar.
(games) In the game of horseshoes, the event of the horseshoe landing around the pole.
(uncountable, games) A game of marbles where players attempt to knock each other's marbles out of a ring drawn on the ground.
(horse racing) A horse fraudently entered in a race using the name of another horse.
(sport) A person highly proficient at a skill or sport who is brought in, often fraudulently, to supplement a team.
A person, animal, or entity which resembles another so closely as to be taken for the other; now usually in the phrase dead ringer .
(UK, dialect) A top performer.
(Australia) The champion shearer of a shearing shed.
(Australia) A stockman, a cowboy.
* 1964 , Alec Bolton, Walkabout?s Australia , ,
* 1987 , Geoffrey Atkinson, Philip Quirk. The Australian Adventure: The Explorer?s Guide to the Island Continent ,
* 2005 , Jake Drake, The Wild West in Australia and America ,
As nouns the difference between sovereign and ringer
is that sovereign is a monarch; the ruler of a country while ringer is someone who rings, especially a bell ringer.As an adjective sovereign
is exercising power of rule.sovereign
English
(wikipedia sovereign)Adjective
(en adjective)- sovereign nation
- The soueraigne weede betwixt two marbles plaine / She pownded small, and did in peeces bruze, / And then atweene her lilly handes twaine, / Into his wound the iuyce thereof did scruze
- a sovereign remedy
- Such a sovereign influence has this passion upon the regulation of the lives and actions of men.
- most sovereign name
- We acknowledge him [God] our sovereign good.
Derived terms
* sovereignlySynonyms
* autonomous * supremeNoun
(en noun)- No question is to be made but that the bed of the Mississippi belongs to the sovereign , that is, to the nation.
Hyponyms
* (monarch) king, queenDerived terms
* sovereigntySee also
* half sovereign/half-sovereign English words not following the I before E except after C ruleringer
English
Etymology 1
From .Noun
(en noun)- Pull, if ye never pull?d before;
- Good ringers , pull your best," quoth he.
- (Simmonds)
Etymology 2
From .Noun
(en noun)Etymology 3
Probably from ring the changes.Noun
(en noun)Derived terms
* dead ringerEtymology 4
.Noun
(en noun)page 107,
- The ringers are the stockmen on a station. The cattle pass through their hands before the drovers lift them and take them along the stock routes that lead to the killing pens in cities.
page 175,
- This vast holding is run by six ringers' and six boys. A '''ringer''' is a qualified stationhand and a boy is a trainee. It takes four years for a boy to become a ' ringer .
page 156,
- Most people associated with the Australian beef industry believe the ringer?s skill of throwing cattle by the tail to be a practice that is purely Australian. There is ample evidence however, that it was practised in South and Central America long before it was developed here.