1 |
Madam |
1. If so; 2. Shiny black piece; |
2 |
Mahnous |
The name of a town in the Kurdish region of Kut in the south of southern Kurdistan, where the Failis lived, but the bloody Iraqi governments evacuated the city from the Kurds and settled Arabs. |
3 |
Malmal |
1. Single households, all households; 2. Someone who keeps the room clean in the house; 3. The names of the heroes of the poem (Nasr and Malmal). |
4 |
Malo |
1. The flowers and plants cut, tied, and wrapped as gifts; 2. Harvested plants, cut with a knife in the fields or forests, are put in rows, then gathered and used for the winter for the cattle. |
5 |
Mamisa |
1. An ancient Syriac name; 2. A tall plant like a poppy produces yellow flowers and fine black seeds good for the stomach. 3. The name of a village in the Badinan region in South Kurdistan. |
6 |
Mamz |
1. Deer; 2. A fish that lays a nest; 3. The iron that fastens the horse rider to the back of the pedal. |
7 |
Mana |
1. Expression, intention in speech or writing; 2. Meaning; 3. Similar; 4. In the Avesta, it means Lord; 5. They were an ancient Kurdish tribe that lived down the Urmia Sea, and then when they came to power, they moved their capital to the city of Ziviyeh or Izirtu, 50 kilometers from Saqqez. The oldest state in East Kurdistan was the Mannaite state, which was the first unified state in the region and had a large military power and economic capacity to stand against the Assyrians and the Urartus. Its history dates back to the beginning of the first millennium and the end of the second millennium BC, when the Aryans came from the northeast to the west. The Manas were part of the union of the Loloi and Gothic tribes that separated from the Zagros Mountains, and their territory covered the area east of Lake Urmia to the southwest of the Caspian Sea, especially between Maragha to Saqqez and Bokan. Rosa I, the first king of the Urartus, captured 22 fortresses or 22 cities in his attack on the Mannaeans, but Sargon, the second king of Assyria, returned from Rwandz and Haji Omeran to Piranshahr and Sindus from 715 to 716 BC From Indraqash and Qumqala of Mahabad to Miandoab, he reached Shiz, the fireplace of Azer Gushasp, and then went to Sayinqala (Shahin dezh), which was then called Awkan. There, he brutally destroyed the Mannaites, but they remained intact until the Medes conquered their land; According to the English Encyclopedia, the Mannaeans were surrounded by three great powers of their time: Assyria, Urartus, and Medes, but after the invasion of the Sakaeans and the emergence of Medes in the seventh century BC, they lost their identity and came under the rule of the Medes. The greatest enemy of the Mannas was the Assyrian state, which was later conquered by the Medes. See the two words manai and manian. |
8 |
Manay |
1. Indestructible, eternal; 2. In Hawrami Man: means family and place, such as Hawraman: means the family or dynasty of the Ahura Mazda; 3. In the Gathas of Zoroaster, which is written in the Kalhuri, Hawrami, Jafi, and Snai dialects, Mana or Manay, signifies Lord and God; 4. Manay is the name of a resort in Hawraman. |
9 |
Mandan |
1. Dark huts in the mountains; 2. The name of the daughter of the king of Media and the mother of Cyrus the Achaemenid, who was of the Median tribe; 3. The name of a village in the Barzan region of South Kurdistan. |
10 |
Mandana |
Mandan, was the wife of King Kambujia of Persia and the mother of King Cyrus of Achaemenid, the daughter of the Median king. See Mandan in the girls' section. |