(isim) moğol

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) moğol
Türkisch - Englisch
Mongol
A member of the nomadic people from the steppes of central Asia who invaded Europe in the 13th Century. The mongol Empire stretched from the Eastern seas of China to the gates of Vienna

They are inhuman and beastly, rather monsters than men, thirsting for and drinking blood, tearing and devouring the flesh of dogs and men, dressed in ox-hides, armed with plates of iron short, stout, thickset, strong, invincible, indefatigable, their backs unprotected, their breasts covered with armour...They have one-edged swords and daggers and spare neither age, nor sex nor condition.

(usually mongol) A person with Down's syndrome
A member of any of the various Mongol ethnic groups living in The Mongolian People's Republic, the (former) USSR, Tibet and Nepal
{i} Mongolian language, language of Mongolia, Mongol
A person from Mongolia; a Mongolian
A person with Downs syndrome
{s} Mongolian, of Mongolian
{i} native or resident of Mongolia; member of Mongoloid people
A member of any of the various Mongol ethnic groups living in The Mongolian Peoples Republic, the (former) USSR, Tibet and Nepal
The Mongols were an Asian people who, led by Genghis Khan and Kublai Khan, took control of large areas of China and Central Asia in the 12th and 13th centuries A.D
Mongol means belonging or relating to the Mongols. the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. a very offensive word for someone with Down's syndrome. Do not use this word. Member of an Asian people originally from the Mongolian plateau who share a common language and a nomadic tradition of herding sheep, cattle, goats, and horses. In the 10th-12th centuries the Khitans (see Liao dynasty), Juchen (Chin dynasty), and Tatars, all Mongol peoples, ruled in Mongolia, but Mongol power was greatest in the 13th century, when Genghis Khan, his sons (including gödei), and his grandsons Batu and Kublai Khan, created one of the world's largest empires. It declined greatly in the 14th century, when China was lost to the Ming dynasty, and the Golden Horde was defeated by Muscovy. Ming incursions effectively ended Mongol unity, and by the 15th-16th centuries only a loose federation existed. Today the plateau is divided between independent Mongolia and Chinese-controlled Inner Mongolia. Other Mongols live in Siberia. Tibetan Buddhism is the principal Mongol religion
(isim) moğol
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