English edit

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

sovran (comparative more sovran, superlative most sovran)

  1. Archaic spelling of sovereign.
    • 1878, Michael Angelo Buonarroti, Tommaso Campanella, Sonnets[1]:
      The Highest comes in Holy Land to hold His sovran court and synod sanctified, As all the psalms and prophets have foretold: The riches of his grace He will spread wide Through his own realm, that seat and chosen fold Of worship and free mercies multiplied.
    • 1908, Henry Van Dyke, The House of Rimmon[2]:
      My pity is a stream; my pride of thee Is like the sea that doth engulf the stream; My love for thee is like the sovran moon That rules the sea.
    • 1915, Alexander Teixeira De Mattos, F.Z.S., Bramble-bees and Others[3]:
      Can animal industry, like our own, obey the law of economy, the sovran law that governs our industrial machine even as it governs, at least to all appearances, the sublime machine of the universe?

Noun edit

sovran (plural sovrans)

  1. Archaic spelling of sovereign (ruler).

Anagrams edit