Oxford Spanish Dictionary
monarchy [ingl. am. ˈmɑnərki, ˈmɑnˌɑrki, ingl. brit. ˈmɒnəki] SUST. C or U
- monarchy
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constitutional monarchy SUST. C or U
- constitutional monarchy
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- hereditary monarchy/title/right
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- restore monarchy/king
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- monarchy
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- constitutional monarchy
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- The current Spanish Constitution was approved in the Cortes Generales in December 1978. It describes Spain as a parliamentary monarchy, gives sovereign power to the people through universal suffrage, recognizes the plurality of religions, and transfers responsibility for defense from the armed forces to the government.
The Constitution was generally well received, except in the Basque Country, whose desire for independence it did not satisfy. It is considered to have facilitated the successful transition from dictatorship to democracy.
en el diccionario PONS
monarchy <-ies> [ˈmɒnəki, ingl. am. ˈmɑ:nɚ-] SUST.
- monarchy
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- restoration of building, painting, monarchy
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- monarchy
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- España (official title: Reino de España) is a constitutional monarchy with a two-chamber system. The king, Juan Carlos I, was appointed Head of State on 22.11.1975. The successor to the throne is Crown Prince Felipe de Asturias. The official language of the country is Spanish. Since 1978, el gallego (Galician), el catalán (Catalan) and el euskera/el vasco (Basque) have also been recognised as national languages.
monarchy <-ies> [ˈman·ər·ki] SUST.
- monarchy
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- monarchy
PONS OpenDict
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- España (official title: Reino de España) is a constitutional monarchy with a two-chamber system. The king, Juan Carlos I, was appointed Head of State on 22.11.1975. The successor to the throne is Crown Prince Felipe de Asturias. The official language of the country is Spanish. Since 1978, el gallego (Galician), el catalán (Catalan) and el euskera/el vasco (Basque) have also been recognised as national languages.