0 an important male member of a royal family, especially a son or grandson of the king or queen -- 王子;親王;王孫
The witch cast a spell on the prince and he turned into a frog.
The prince has two bodyguards watching over him every hour of the day.
In it, twelve dancers, dressed as twelve princes, danced in imitation of the deities, accompanied by songs in their praise.
The bits of bureaucracy that mattered were run by important princes or by commoners very close to the court.
Democratic princes can energetically pursue public policies-whether in security, trade, technology, or welfare-because they feel, and to a degree are, mandated so to do.
There are often difficulties of this kind with media writers, as well as problems in attracting the attention of both princes and janitors.
Even more secular forms of address, such as the mirror of princes, were heavily laden with religious content.
Rather than a screed against giving advice to princes, the answer might lie in broadening the range of advice available to princes.