bint

listen to the pronunciation of bint
Турецкий язык - Турецкий язык
Kız
BİNT
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Kız. Kızı. "Fâtıma bint-i Resûl-i Ekrem (A.S.M.): Resûl-i Ekrem'in (A.S.M.) kızı Fâtıma (R.A
BİNT
(Hukuk) Kız, kız çocuk
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
A woman, a girl

Don't you remember the Crimbo din-din we had with the grotty Scots bint?.

A woman or girl
Woman, girl
Bint Jabal
{i} village in south Lebanon
A'ishah bint Abi Bakr
born 614, Mecca, Arabia died July 678, Medina Third wife of Muhammad. The daughter of his supporter Ab Bakr, she became Muhammad's favourite wife. Left a childless widow at 18, she became politically active during the reign of the third caliph, Uthmn ibn Affn, leading the opposition that resulted in his murder in 656. She led an army against his successor, Al, who defeated her in the Battle of the Camel. She was allowed to live her remaining years quietly in Medina and is credited with transmitting more than a thousand Hadth
bint

    Произношение

    Этимология

    () From Arabic بنت, girl or daughter, used to denote a patronym. The term entered the British lexicon during the occupation of Egypt at the end of the nineteenth century and stems, adopted by British soldiers to mean "girlfriend" or "bit on the side". It is used as a derogatory slang word in the United Kingdom meaning woman or girl. Its register varies from that of the harsher bitch to an only slightly derogatory, almost affectionate, term for a young woman, the latter being more commonly associated with the West Midlands. The term was used in British armed forces and the London area synonymously with bird in its slang usage (and sometimes brass) from at least the 1950s. The term has also famously been used in the classic film Monty Python and the Holy Grail, in which the Lady of the Lake is referred to as a "moistened bint", and in the phrase "grotty Scots bint" in the "English English" scene of the film ''Austin Powers in Goldmember. Following the Second World War, workers were imported from Yemen to fill the vacancies left in the Tyneside ship-building industry. The term found its way into the Geordie dialect from the late 1940s onwards and is still used to this day. Although the term can be used in a derogatory sense, in general it refers simply to (usually young) females.
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