subah
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Urdu صوبہ (sūbā, “province”).
Noun
[edit]subah (plural subahs)
- (India, historical) A province of the Mughal Empire.
- 1806, [Thomas Maurice], Indian Antiquities: Or, Dissertations Relative to the Antient Geographical Divisions, […] of Hindostan: […] , volume I. Containing the Dissertation on the Antient Geographical Divisions of Hindostan, London: Printed […] by C. & W. Galabin […] and sold by John White […] , pages 231–232:
- Hindostan was then parcelled out into twelve grand divisions, called soobahs, to each of which a viceroy was assigned, by the title of Soobahdar, corruptly written Soobah by European writers; for, soobah signifies province: many of these soobahs were in extent equal to large European kingdoms.
- 1818, “Review of The History of British India by James Mill, Esq.”, in The British Review, and London Critical Journal, volume 12, pages 253–54:
- Upon this, Mirzapha Jung immediately assumed the subah, and nominated Chunda Saheb governor of the Carnatic.
- (India, historical) Synonym of subadar (“the governor or commander in charge of a subah; a viceroy”)
References
[edit]- “subah”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
Anagrams
[edit]Gayo
[edit]Conjunction
[edit]subah
- emphatically: because, just because
- Subah wé kaja, djĕnkat pĕdih bĕprih [1]
- Just because he feels so rich, he is presumptious in his speaking
Adjective
[edit]subah
- insolent, disrespecting
- Òja anak ngö subah kĕn ama-inöé pudah a.
- That child has behaved without respect towards his parents. (— implying: that's why he is ill.)
References
[edit]- ^ Gajosch-Nederlandsch Woordenboek, door G.A.J. Hazeu, Landsdrukkerij Batavia 1907