Plural form of czar; multiple Russian emperors or autocratic rulers.
The English plural of czar, formed by adding -s. Czar itself comes from Russian tsar, derived from the Latin Caesar, adopted by Russians to describe their supreme rulers.
Czar is one of the most powerful borrowed words in English history—it comes from Caesar through Russian, and shows how political titles migrate across languages and centuries; modern English still uses czar metaphorically (like 'drug czar') to mean any supreme authority.
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.