Asked by deja

How does a constitutional monarchy differ from an absolute monarchy?

It gives kings and queens much more power.
It allows judges to put a king or queen in jail.
It prevents kings and queens from making laws.
It puts limits on the power of the king and queen.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"It puts limits on the power of the king and queen."

In a constitutional monarchy the monarch's powers are restricted by a constitution or laws (often with an elected parliament and independent courts), whereas in an absolute monarchy the monarch holds almost unchecked authority.