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czarina

[zah-ree-nuh, tsah-] / zɑˈri nə, tsɑ- /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Culture: A decade ago, the “czarinas” emerged as Russia’s fashion ambassadors.

From New York Times

“Germany and Russia have been linked for a thousand years. The biggest Russian czarina was Catherine the Great, a German, who incidentally made Crimea part of Russia.”

From New York Times

Some are already well known — the slew of young women pretending to be Anastasia, the lost czarina, or the Fox sisters, whose hoaxes launched spiritualism into stratospheric popularity.

From New York Times

"It took a long time to kill his son, the czarina and the princesses," a historian murmurs.

From Salon

A prince plots to kill mad monk Rasputin for the good of the czar, the czarina and Russia.

From Los Angeles Times