Need another word that means the same as “palace”? Find 4 synonyms and 30 related words for “palace” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Palace” are: castle, official residence, royal residence, mansion
Palace as a Noun
Definitions of "Palace" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “palace” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- A large ornate exhibition hall.
- A large and stately mansion.
- Official residence of an exalted person (as a sovereign.
- A large, splendid house or place of entertainment.
- The governing group of a kingdom.
- A large and impressive building forming the official residence of a ruler, pope, archbishop, etc.
Synonyms of "Palace" as a noun (4 Words)
castle | A large building, typically of the medieval period, fortified against attack with thick walls, battlements, towers, and in many cases a moat. The crumbling stonework of a ruined castle. |
mansion | A terrace or mansion block. Carlyle Mansions. |
official residence | A worker who holds or is invested with an office. |
royal residence | A sail set next above the topgallant on a royal mast. |
Usage Examples of "Palace" as a noun
- The royal palace.
- The palace issued an order binding on all subjects.
Associations of "Palace" (30 Words)
aristocrat | A member of the aristocracy. An aristocrat by birth. |
aristocratic | Belonging to or characteristic of the nobility or aristocracy. Aristocratic government. |
baton | A staff of office or authority, especially one carried by a field marshal. Batons of cheddar cheese. |
castle | A magnificent and imposing old mansion. Both of the players castled on the queenside. |
concubine | A mistress. |
corinthian | Or pertaining to the Corinthian style of architecture. |
diadem | An ornamental jeweled headdress signifying sovereignty. He refused the diadem of all the Caesars. |
dynasty | A line of hereditary rulers of a country. The Guinness dynasty. |
edict | A formal or authoritative proclamation. Clovis issued an edict protecting Church property. |
emperor | An orange and brown North American butterfly with a swift dodging flight, breeding chiefly on hackberries. He became emperor in 1930. |
empire | Denoting a style of furniture, decoration, or dress fashionable chiefly during the First Empire in France. The decorative style was neoclassical but marked by an interest in Egyptian and other ancient motifs. Her business empire grew. |
imperial | Relating to or associated with an empire. The party and its autocratic many would say imperial ways. |
kingdom | A monarchy with a king or queen as head of state. The kingdom of dreams. |
kingship | The dignity or rank or position of a king. Edmund assumed kingship of Mercia. |
liege | A feudal superior or sovereign. The Scots obeyed him as their liege lord. |
majestic | Majestic in manner or bearing superior to mundane matters. His majestic presence. |
majesty | Impressiveness in scale or proportion. The majesty of the royal household. |
noble | Especially in former times a person of noble rank or birth. The Duchess of Kent and several other noble ladies. |
patrician | A member of a noble family or class in ancient Rome. A patrician nose. |
prince | A male monarch of a small state, actually, nominally, or originally subject to a king or emperor. Arctic char is a prince among fishes. |
princess | The wife or widow of a prince. The princess of American politics. |
principality | Wales. |
queen | Become a queen. The queen of ocean liners. |
regal | A small portable reed organ of the 16th and 17th centuries, with a pair of horizontal bellows on top. Her regal bearing. |
regalia | The emblems or insignia of royalty, especially the crown, sceptre, and other ornaments used at a coronation. The Bishop of Florence in full regalia. |
regency | The particular period of a regency especially in Britain from 1811 to 1820 and in France from 1715 to 1723. The boy being a minor there would have to be a regency. |
royal | Invested with royal power as symbolized by a crown. The coalition obtained royal approval for the appointment. |
scepter | The imperial authority symbolized by a scepter. |
sovereign | Very good or effective. Our most sovereign lord the King. |
ukase | (in tsarist Russia) a decree with the force of law. Tsar Alexander I issued his famous ukase unilaterally decreeing the North Pacific Coast Russian territory. |