Crossword clues for bandar
Wikipedia
Bandar or Bunder is a Persian word meaning "port" and "haven". It may refer to:
Bandar or Bunder (in Persian بندر) is a Persian word meaning "port" and "haven". Etymologically it combines Persian بند Band (enclosed) and در dar (gate, door) meaning "an enclosed area" (i.e. protected from the sea). The word travelled with Persian sailors over a wide area leading to several coastal places in Iran and elsewhere having Bandar (haven) as part of their names. In some Indian languages the word Bandargah means "port". In Indonesian Malay it means "port".
Usage examples of "bandar".
The image quickly darkened and solidified until the academician appeared as solid as Bandar.
We visited yesterday a Malay kampong called Mambu, in order to pay an unceremonious visit to the Datu Bandar, the Rajah second in rank to the reigning prince.
Bandar knew the dark eidolon was not the real Gabbris, was in fact a projected reification of those negative qualities that Bandar rejected in his own makeup.
They were an indigenous people, and called themselves the bandar yoi inoie, which meant the forest folk.
Although they lived freely in the forests, the bandar yoi inoie were slaves of a Shaped bloodline, the Mighty People.
He was a strong man, ugly even by the standards of the bandar yoi inoie.
He had learned that this was the traditional challenge amongst the bandar yoi inoie, who decided their social status and won their husbands and wives by their ability to tell tales.
The bandar yoi inoie did not mourn the destruction of the lowland forests.
The bandar yoi inoie had many stories about the strange and fabulous creatures which lived in the lowland and hill forests.
The bandar yoi inoie had stories about the strange races of men which lived in the lowland forests too.
Yama had forgotten that the bandar yoi inoie were in thrall to the Mighty People, but two days later they finally reached the valley where the Mighty People lived, and he saw how bad things were for their slaves.
They were an indigenous people, and called themselves the bandar yol inoie, which meant the forest folk.
Bandar could imagine Malabar and the angry hydromants, standing along the south wall, eyeing the darkness beyond the shantytown and waiting for the first glint of spear and halberd in the grip of massive Bololos who were themselves no less in the grasp of an archetypical holy violence.
Bandar heard a mass sigh of released breath, and a low moan from Brond Halorn.
Bandar chanted the three, three, seven and went again into the Bololo nosphere.