abbas

listen to the pronunciation of abbas
Turkish - Turkish
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Resul-i Ekrem Aleyhissalâtu Vesselâmın amcalarındandır ve Mekke'nin fethinde Müslüman olmuştur
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Arslan, gazanfer
Sert, çatık kaşlı kimse
Yola çıkacak kimse" anlamındaki Abbas yolcu deyiminde geçer
Boğazköy kazılarında bulunan bir yazıt
Sert, haşin, boyun eğmez
German - Turkish
n.pr. mV spez. Onkel Mohammeds
Latin - English
head of an ecclesiastical community
any respected monk (early)
abbot
father
English - English
A surname
A male given name
known as Abbs the Great born Jan. 27, 1571 died Jan. 19, 1629 Shah of Persia (1587-1629). Succeeding his father, Muammad Shah, he strengthened the Safavid dynasty by expelling Ottoman and Uzbek troops and creating a standing army. Abbs made Esfahan Persia's capital, and under him it became one of the world's most beautiful cities. Persian artistic achievement reached a high point during his reign; illuminated manuscripts, ceramics, and painting all flourished, and the Portuguese, Dutch, and English competed for trade relations with Persia. Tolerant in public life (he granted privileges to Christian groups) and concerned for his people's welfare, his fear for his personal security led him to act ruthlessly against his immediate family. born 1813 died July 13, 1854, Banh, Egypt Viceroy of Egypt (1848-54) under the Ottoman Empire. His rule was one of consolidation, when many of the Western-style reforms begun by his grandfather, Muhammad Al, were either discontinued or neglected. Though generally distrusting of foreigners, he allowed the British to construct a railroad between Alexandria and Cairo in 1851. The British, in turn, assisted him in disputes with his Ottoman overlords, whom he nonetheless aided by sending troops to fight in the Crimean War (1853). A recluse, he was murdered by two servants at his palace in Banh. Abbas I Abbas the Great Abbas Ferhat Abbas Mahmoud Kiarostami Abbas
{i} Arabic name
abbas

    Etymology

    () From Arabic عباس (ʕabbās, “one who frowns a lot; untamed lion”), from عبس (ʕábasa, “to frown”), the title of the eightieth sura of the Qur'an.
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