Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Fath bin Khakan (Al -) and Al – Mutawakkil, v. Ferryman of the Nile and the Hermit, The, v. First Old Man’s Story, i.
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Munnis, Ali bin Tahir and the girl, v. Musab bin al-Zubayr and Ayishah his wife, v. Muslim bin al-Walid and Dibil al-Khuzai, v. Mutawakkil (Al -) and Al – Fath bin Khakan, v. Mutawakkil and his favourite Mahbubah, iv.
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Negush (Abyssinia), Khakan or Khan (Tartary), etc., who claimed to have extended their conquests to Samarcand and made war on China.
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And the Khakan of China was enmeshed in his cord, and he sent him bound unto Kai Khosrau with news of the victory.
The Epic of Kings Firdausi 2002
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But the Khakan and the Kamous scoffed at his fears, and they made loud boastings that Rustem should fall by their hands.
The Epic of Kings Firdausi 2002
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Now when the Khakan heard of the death of the Kamous, he sware that he would avenge him, and he sent forth a messenger to defy
The Epic of Kings Firdausi 2002
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And there were joined unto him the hosts of the Khakan of China, and of the Kamous of Kushan, men mighty in the battlefield.
The Epic of Kings Firdausi 2002
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And upon this, the palace was filled with shrieking, and the news reached the ears of the Sultan, and the people of the city heard of the death of El-Fadl the son of Khakan, and even the boys in the schools wept for him.
Nights 32-36. The Story of Nur-Ed-din and Enis-El-Jelis. 1909
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Now the King Mohammad the son of Suleyman Ez-Zeyni was sitting one day upon his throne, surrounded by the officers of his court, and he called to his Wezir El-Fadl the son of Khakan, and said to him, I desire a female slave unsurpassed in beauty by any in her age, of perfect loveliness and exquisite symmetry, and endowed with all praiseworthy qualities.
Nights 32-36. The Story of Nur-Ed-din and Enis-El-Jelis. 1909
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But there was in the court of the Sultan a chamberlain named Alam-ed-in Senjer, who had been one of the memluks of El-Fadl the son of Khakan, the father of Ali Nur-ed-Din; and when he heard the order of the Sultan, and saw the enemies prepared to slay his masters son, it was insupportable to him; so he mounted his horse, and proceeded to the house of Ali Nur-ed-Din, and knocked at the door.
Nights 32-36. The Story of Nur-Ed-din and Enis-El-Jelis. 1909
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