Definition of Dargas

1. darga [n] - See also: darga

Lexicographical Neighbors of Dargas

daredevils
daredeviltries
daredeviltry
daredn't
dareful
daren't
darer
darers
dares
daresay
darest
dareth
darg
darga
dargah
dargas (current term)
dargle
dargles
dargs
daric
darics
daring
daringly
daringness
daringnesses
darings
dariole
darioles
daris
dark

Literary usage of Dargas

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Pahlavi Texts: Part I and II by Edward William West (1901)
"If in a house there are three rooms (gun^î- nak), and otie shall die in the entrance place (dargas), if it be so that they may set the door open, ..."

2. Princeton Theological Review by Princeton Theological Seminary (1912)
"Aim of Education; WN TOBIE, Cosmic Principle of the Cross; EDWIN Mi MS, Religious Tone of Victorian Literature; EC dargas. Frederick W. Robertson: the Man ..."

3. A Statistical Account of Bengal by William Wilson Hunter (1876)
"... lands are small endowments for the purpose of the maintenance of tombs (dargas) and mosques, and are met with in almost every village ..."

4. Illustrations of Irish History and Topography, Mainly of the Seventeenth by Caesar Litton Falkiner, Fynes Moryson, Josias Bodley, Luke Gernon, William Brereton, Albert Jouvin (1904)
"Roger Davys and Samuel dargas. 1635. Mathew Mainwaring. 1644. Mathew and Dudley Mainwaring. 1660. Sir John Stephens. 1673. Col. John Jeffreys. 1680. ..."

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