kashmir

listen to the pronunciation of kashmir
الإنجليزية - التركية
kaşmir
kasmir
kashmir goat
kaşmir keçisi
Kashmir'i
i., s. Keşmirli
Kashmir'ian
{s} Keşmir, Keşmir'e özgü
Kashmir'ian
{s} Keşmirli
kashmir issue
keşmir sorunu
the Vale of Kashmir
Keşmir Vadisi
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
A region in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent, between India, Pakistan and China
{i} historical region divided between India and Pakistan (also Cashmere)
an area of northwest India and northeast Pakistan. After India became independent in 1947, Kashmir was divided so that part of it now belongs to India, and part to Pakistan. Region of the northwestern Indian subcontinent. It is bounded to the northeast and east by China, to the south by India, to the west by Pakistan, and to the northwest by Afghanistan. The land is predominantly mountainous and includes K2 and other peaks of the Karakoram Range. India and Pakistan have disputed over the region since India's partition in 1947. Pakistan occupies the northern and western portions, and India administers the largest area, in the south and southeast, organized as the state of Jammu and Kashmir. In addition, China has held portions of the northeastern section since 1962
an area in southwestern Asia whose sovereignty is disputed between Pakistan and India
cashmere
Kashmir goat
Variant of Cashmere goat
Jammu and Kashmir
State in Northern India which has Srinagar as its capital (Jammu is its winter capital)
Jammu and Kashmir
{i} state in northern of India and Pakistan, official name of Kashmir
Jammu and Kashmir
State (pop., 2001: 10,143,700), northern India. With an area of 39,146 sq mi (101,387 sq km), it occupies the southern portion of the Kashmir region of the northwestern Indian subcontinent and is bordered by the portions of Kashmir administered by Pakistan and China and by the Indian states of Himachal Pradesh and Punjab. The land is predominantly mountainous and includes segments of the Karakoram and Himalaya ranges. Much of Kashmir's Ladakh region is included in the state. There are two major lowland areas: the Jammu plain and the fertile and heavily populated Vale of Kashmir. The majority of the state's people are Muslims, although Hindus predominate in the southeastern Jammu area, and northeastern Ladakh is largely Buddhist. Formerly a princely state created in the 1840s, Jammu and Kashmir became an Indian state in 1947, even as India and Pakistan were fighting for control of the entire Kashmir region. A cease-fire line, established in 1949, has since served as the state's boundary with the Pakistan-administered area. Tension has remained high in the region, and there have been periodic outbreaks of border fighting
kashmir
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