Definition of Hakam

1. a sage [n -S] - See also: sage

Lexicographical Neighbors of Hakam

haiweeite
haj
hajduk
hajduks
hajes
haji
hajib
hajis
hajj
hajjah
hajjahs
hajjes
hajji
hajjis
haka
hakam (current term)
hakama
hakams
hakapik
hakapiks
hakas
hake
haked
hakeem
hakeems
hakelike
hakes
haketon
haketons
hakim

Literary usage of Hakam

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

1. A Oriental Biographical Dictionary: Founded on Materials Collected by the by Thomas William Beale, Henry George Keene (1881)
"I, f»tC*!li^'-tr*» son of hakam, was the fourth khalif of the race of Umayya. ... Himar or the ass, was the son of Muhammad the son of hakam, ..."

2. The Story of the Moors in Spain by Stanley Lane-Poole, Arthur Gilman (1903)
"The Sultan hakam looked forth over the sea of faces, and watched with consternation the devoted mob repulsing the charge of his tried cavalry; ..."

3. Ibn Khallikan's Biographical Dictionary by Ibn Khallikān (1843)
"He proceeds to state that Abu '1-hakam removed to Syria and settled at Damascus, where he had many amusing adventures indicative of his light-hearted ..."

4. A History of Spain from the Earliest Times to the Death of Ferdinand the by Ulick Ralph ( Burke (1895)
"The reign of hakam II., the son and successor of the great Caliph, was tranquil, ... hakam not only built libraries, but, unlike many modern collectors, ..."

5. An Arabic-English Vocabulary of the Colloquial Arabic of Egypt: Containing ...by Socrates Spiro by Socrates Spiro (1895)
"/ii/cr, rental of ground on which a building is raised. (£*:) hakam ... to judge, govern, rule; J <^- hakam ... gave judgment in my favour; *Je v- hakam ..."

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