0 a large and powerful state formed when several smaller countries unite:
a European/Federal superstate
A word's current-state set, or superstate, may be identified with a state of the deterministic automaton.
This constitution does not bring about a superstate; instead, it creates balance by allocating competences, a role of which national parliaments fight shy.
This constitution is the last piece in the jigsaw in creating what is not necessarily a superstate.
Anyone who dreaded the emergence of a centralised, almighty 'superstate' should be more than reassured.
They are obsessed that the charter is yet another step to what they describe as a superstate.
Our definitions of ‘subsidiarity’ and ‘superstate’ clearly differ from those of the rapporteurs.
This is not a superstate, this is democracy.
There are two driving forces behind this: the desire for a superstate, and a lack of political principle.