i Register
In some senses, interregnum is marked as figuratively, obsolete. Watch for register when choosing this word.
noun
A period of time between the end of one monarch's reign and the accession of their successor.
The Sasanian Interregnum of 628–632
It was not till the kings had been shorn of power and the interregnum of sham democracy had set in, leaving no virile force in the state or the world to resist the money power, that the opportunity for a world-wide plutocratic despotism arrived.
A break in continuity; a gap, an intermission.
Is it not Pelham who wonders what becomes of servants when they are not wanted;—whether, like the tones of an instrument, they exist but when called for? About servants we will not decide; but that some such interregnum certainly occurs in female existence on rising from table, no one can doubt who ever noted the sound of the dining and the silence of the drawing-room.
This was in that strange pause of the storm which is its most remarkable feature in the South—that singular interregnum of the winds, when, after giving repeated notice of their most terrific action, they seem almost to forget their purpose, and for a few moments appear to slumber in their inactivity.
A period of time between when a minister or pastor leaves a church and when a new one is installed.
A period of time between the end of one political leader's term and the start of the term of their successor; a period of time during which normal executive leadership is interrupted or suspended, and a polity is either left without leaders
Darker questions still emerge in these dusky final weeks of our interregnum.
A temporary exercise of authority or rule during a period of time when there is no monarch or political leader.
name
Ellipsis of British Interregnum, the period of 1649–1660 when an unmonarchical state ruled Britain; the monarchy was then restored.
Meronyms: Commonwealth; Commonwealth of England; Protectorate; Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland