ındia

listen to the pronunciation of ındia
English - Turkish

Definition of ındia in English Turkish dictionary

India
{i} Hindistan

Bombay, Hindistan'ın en çok nüfusa sahip şehridir ve dünyadaki ikinci en çok nüfusa sahip şehirdir. - Mumbai is the most populous city in India and the second most populous city in the world.

Sen Hindistanlı gibi görünüyorsun. - It looks like you are from India.

India
(isim) Hindistan
India ink
çini mürekkebi

Çini mürekkebi boya olarak kullanıldığı zaman ilginç bir yapı üretir. - India ink produces an interesting pattern when used as a dye.

India rubber
lastik
India rubber
doğal kauçuk
India paper
incecik sağlam kâğıt
India paper
pelür
English - English

Definition of ındia in English English dictionary

India
The territory east of the river Indus and south of the Himalaya mountains (formerly also known as Hindustan)
India
Formerly applied to America, also plural Indies (obsolete)
India
Country in South Asia (Bharat). Official name: Republic of India
India
The letter I in the ICAO spelling alphabet
India
Formerly applied to America, also pl. Indies (obsolete)
India
a large country in South Asia. Population: 1,030,000,000 (2001). Capital: New Delhi. India was ruled by the British from 1757 until 1947, and is now the largest democracy in the world. The official languages are Hindi and English, and most people belong to the Hindu religion, although there are also large populations of Muslims and Sikhs. officially Republic of India Country, South Asia. Republic of India East India Co. East India Co. Dutch East India Co. French All India Muslim League India rubber plant
India
{i} large territory in southern Asia; country located in southern Asia
India ink
a black ink, made from lampblack, used for printing and artwork
India pale ale
A beer, with a high level of alcohol and hops, traditionally made for export from Britain to India
India pale ales
plural form of India pale ale
India rubber
Alternative spelling of india rubber
India paper
thin but tough paper used in printing the bible and large reference works
British East India Company
A seventeenth-century joint-stock company founded to trade with India to Britain's advantage
French India
The administrative whole of the French colonial possessions, all enclaved on the Indian subcontinent (East Indies), comprising Pondicherry (the joint governor's capital), Chandernagor (Chandernagore), Mahé (Mahe), Masulipatam, Yanam (Yanaon) and Karikal
North India
the northern region of India, comprising the states of Delhi, Haryana, Jammu and Kashmir, Punjab, Uttaranchal, and Uttar Pradesh
South India
the southern region of India, comprising the states of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu, as well as the union territories of Lakshadweep and Pondicherry
A Passage to India
a book by E. M. Forster about the relationships in India between British people and Indians during the early 1900s, when Britain controlled India's government (1924)
Bassas da India
{i} islands in southern Africa in the southern Mozambique Channel (possession of France)
British East India Company
British shipping and export company that operated between 1600-1874 and monopolized the trade in Indian goods (known for corruption and its power over the government of British India)
British India
{i} part of India that was under direct British administration and rule from 1765 to 1947 (until India'ss independence in 1947)
British India
The part of the Indian subcontinent under direct British administration until India's independence in 1947
Clive of India
a British soldier and government leader, Robert Clive, whose victories over the French and Bengali armies in India helped to establish British rule in India (1725-74)
Dutch East India Co
Trading company founded by the Dutch in 1602 to protect their trade in the Indian Ocean and to assist in their war of independence from Spain. The Dutch government granted it a trade monopoly in the waters between the Cape of Good Hope and the Straits of Magellan. Under the administration of forceful governors-general, it was able to defeat the British fleet and largely displace the Portuguese in the East Indies. It prospered through most of the 17th century but then began to decline as a trading and sea power; it was dissolved in 1799. See also East India Co., French East India Co
East India
Indonesia; Southeast Asia
East India Co
or English East India Co. English chartered company formed for trade with East and Southeast Asia and India, incorporated in 1600. It began as a monopolistic trading body, establishing early trading stations at Surat, Madras (now Chennai), Bombay (Mumbai), and Calcutta (Kolkata). Trade in spices was its original focus; this broadened to include cotton, silk, and other goods. In 1708 it merged with a rival and was renamed the United Co. of Merchants of England Trading to the East Indies. Becoming involved in politics, it acted as the chief agent of British imperialism in India in the 18th-19th century, exercising substantial power over much of the subcontinent. The company's activities in China in the 19th century served as a catalyst for the expansion of British influence there; its financing of the tea trade with illegal opium exports led to the first Opium War (1839-42). From the late 18th century it gradually lost both commercial and political control; its autonomy diminished after two acts of Parliament (1773, 1774) established a regulatory board responsible to Parliament, though the act gave the company supreme authority in its domains. It ceased to exist as a legal entity in 1873. See also Dutch East India Co., French East India Co
East India Company
one of several European companies that developed trade with India and east Asia in the 17th and 18th centuries. The British East India Company (1600-1858) was the most important of these, and was responsible for bringing India into the British Empire
French East India Co
Trading company founded by Jean-Baptiste Colbert in 1664, and its successors, established to oversee French commerce with India, East Africa, and other territories of the Indian Ocean and the East Indies. In constant competition with the already-established Dutch East India Co., it mounted expensive expeditions that were often harassed by the Dutch. It also suffered in the French economic crash of 1720, and by 1740 the value of its trade with India was half that of the English East India Co. Its monopoly over French trade with India was ended in 1769, and it languished until its disappearance in the French Revolution
India
{i} Indo
India
ind
Passage to India
novel written in 1924 by E. M. Forster (also made into a movie)
Turkish - English

Definition of ındia in Turkish English dictionary

çini mürekkebi India ink, China ink, Chinese ink, Brit
Indian ink
ındia

    Hyphenation

    In·di·a

    Turkish pronunciation

    îndiı

    Pronunciation

    /ˈəndēə/ /ˈɪndiːə/

    Etymology

    () From Latin India from Ancient Greek Ἰνδία (India) from Ἰνδός (Indos, “Indus River”) from Old Persian hinduš (Persian هند (Hend)) from Sanskrit सिन्धु (síndhu, “a river, stream”).

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    ... But they never come to India and other countries in Asia. ...
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