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Mongolian vs Moghul - What's the difference?

mongolian | moghul |

mongolian

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Of or relating to Mongolia or its peoples, languages, or cultures = Mongol.
  • * 1706 - Evert Y. Ides: Three years travels from Moscow over-land to China ...
  • He had a Sister, which according to the Mongalian custom lived in the devoted spiritual state.
  • * 1878 - Encyclopedia Britannica , ninth edition, volume XVI
  • The Mongolian characters...are written perpendicularly from above downward.
  • * 1985 - Robert Whelan: Robert Capa: A Biography
  • He usually had a heavy growth of dark stubble that made him look...rather like a Mongolian bandit.
  • Anthropology . Resembling or having some of the characteristic physical features of the Mongoloid]] racial type = [[mongoloid, Mongoloid.
  • * 1828 - John Stark: Elements of natural history
  • The Mongolian variety inhabits eastern Asia, Finland, and Lapland in Europe, and includes the Esquimaux of North America.
  • * 1834 - Penny cyclopædia of the Society for the diffusion of useful knowledge , volume II
  • The white (or Caucasian), the yellow (or Mongolian ), and the black (or Ethiopian)
  • * 1990 - Louis de Bernières: ''The War of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts
  • It was not so much their Mongolian features that impressed everyone...
  • Designating or affected with Down syndrome = Mongol.
  • Spelling': Also ' mongolian .
  • * 1866 - John Langdon Haydon Down in Clinical lectures and reports by the medical and surgical staff of the London Hospital , volume II
  • The Mongolian type of idiocy occurs in more than ten per cent. of the cases which are presented to me.
  • * 1965 - H. Eldon Sutton: An introduction to human genetics
  • The condition known as trisomy 21 syndrome or mongolian idiocy (sometimes referred to as Down's syndrome) had long been an enigma.

    Derived terms

    {{der3, Mongolian gazelle , Mongolian gerbil , Mongolian lamb , Mongolian pheasant , Mongolian spot , Mongolian wild ass}}

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A native or inhabitant of Mongolia = Mongol.
  • * 1757 , John Dyer: The fleece, a poem (published in 1807):
  • The Cossac there, The Calmuc, and Mungalian , round the bales In crowds resort.
  • * 1763 , John Bell, A journey from St. Petersburg to Pekin :
  • This day we saw some scattered tents of Mongalians , with their flocks.
  • * 1854 , Robert G. Latham, in Orr's Circle of the sciences: Organic nature :
  • The Mongolians are the most nomadic of populations.
  • * 1990 September 1, New Scientist :
  • Mongolians now regard animal husbandry as a low-status occupation.
  • A group of Altaic languages from Mongolia, specifically Khalkha, the official language of Mongolia.
  • * 1926 , Neville J. Whymant: A Mongolian Grammar :
  • Khalka Mongolian possesses seven vowels and twenty consonants.
  • * 1987 . David Crystal, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language :
  • The Altaic family comprises about 40 languages, classified into three groups: Turkic, Mongolian , and Manchu-Tungus.
  • * 1990 April, Orientations :
  • These inscriptions are in Mongolian and thus widen the appliqué's international connections.
  • A person of Mongoloid physical type; a Mongoloid.
  • * 1823 July, North American Revolution :
  • A particular individual which the latter considered a Mongolian and the former assures us is an Ethiopian.
  • * 1938 , Franz Boas, et al., General Anthropology :
  • Extreme forms like the Australians, Negroes, Mongolians , and Europeans may be described as races because each has certain characteristics which set them off from other groups, and which are strictly hereditary.
  • * 1988 , Current Anthropology , volume 29:
  • The thesis of this work was that native Americans were one race distinct from Eskimos and Mongolians .

    See also

    * (mn) * *

    moghul

    English

    Alternative forms

    * Mogor * Mogul * Mughal

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A head of the Mongolian dynasty founded by Zah?r-ud-D?n Muhammed B?bur (1483-1530) which controlled large parts of southern Asia from the 16th to the 19th centuries.
  • A Mongol or Mongolian, especially a member or follower of the Moghul dynasty.
  • An important or successful person; a magnate. (Now usually as (mogul))
  • See also

    * mogul