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Imperial pinyin

imperial pinyin: dì guó.

phonetic notation: ㄉㄍㄨㄛ _.

part of speech: noun.

structure: emperor (upper and lower structure) country (fully enclosed structure).

Explanation of words:

1. A large or colonial monarchy.

2. Although there is no emperor, countries that expand outward are sometimes called "empires".

an example is the boss empire. -Qing Liang Qichao's Collection of Drinking Rooms and Anthology.

3. It is a metaphor for a large enterprise with a huge organization and strong strength.

a newspaper empire.

a financial empire.

Citation and explanation:

1. A country controlled by emperors and implementing a monarchy.

Quote Tan Zuomin's "Ding Wei's Feelings in the Yellow Sea": "The imperial land is bounded to donate to the Zen Sea, and no one in the empire loses his power."

2. It refers to a country that has a colony or has no monarch and expands arbitrarily.

For example: Roman Empire; British empire; The Third Reich.

3. Kyoto.

Quote the second word of Zhou Bangyan's "Looking at Flowers" in Song Dynasty: "Yunfei Empire, people are secretly bent by the clouds."

Mandarin dictionary: a country with the title of emperor.

such as "Roman Empire" and "Germanic Empire".

network explanation: empire is used to describe a powerful country ruled by a monarch (emperor) in a narrow sense, and it is used to describe a country with strong national strength in a broad sense, not limited to a monarchy.

in the category of modern international politics, it also refers to a country that has established a distinctive political, economic, social and military system and humanistic values in a large geographical area, and promoted and maintained this system among countries, and formed a certain range of international political systems.

Empire

Empire needs to be unified and vast in territory first. You can be a joke like the Korean Empire, and no one will admit it. Secondly, the empire needs to be multi-ethnic. Generally speaking, according to western feudalism, it is generally the king of a certain nation. The emperors of many kingdoms (this kingdom may only exist legally, but it does not actually exist) are more practical. You have to inherit it and have others recognize you.

Secondly, the territory of China's ancient dynasties can be flexibly adjusted and almost infinitely expanded. In a narrow sense, there are unification and division in China's long history. "If you divide for a long time, you will divide.". Broadly speaking, during the period of unification or division, the territory of China has always been flexibly adjusted. Just like in the Han Dynasty and the Tang Dynasty, there were "Jifu states" in the Tang Dynasty, which were different from the vassal states, because these Jifu states were "led by the governors and dufu of the border states, and were based on the order", which was no different from the direct territory of the Tang Dynasty.