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kabuli

a. Of, from or related to the Afghan city of Kabul

Usage examples of "kabuli".

What had happened is this story of the monster Kabuli, which is an animal story even without the entrance of the racing elephant, Gunpat Rao.

They brought nuts from High Himalaya, foot-hill raisins and the long white Kabuli grapes themselves, packed in cotton, a dozen to fifteen in the box.

Then there were dried figs and dates, pomegranates picked up far this side of the Hills, Kabuli weaves of cloth, and silks inwoven with gold thread.

And perhaps it is just as well that you missed the look that came into the eyes of the monster Kabuli when the beautiful English missionary, Margaret Annesley, passed.

But Margaret Annesley continued to greet the monster Kabuli from time to time.

One day while he was down in the bazaars buying provisions, the monster Kabuli beckoned Deenah to come closer.

The Kabuli replied that he was not sure that the Sahiba would go to a Mohammedan house, even with her friend the Hakima, unless Deenah could assure his mistress that the Mohammedan was well known to him and honourable, his house an abode of fellowship and peace.

In fact, if the Kabuli could come this afternoon--when the Sahiba and the Hakima would be away--and tell his story once more, in the presence of the utterly reliable among the servants--all might be brought to pass.

The face of Deenah was the face of one struck and crippled with his own needs, which point helped the Kabuli to decision.

In the afternoon, when the house was empty, the monster Kabuli called and opened a small pack in the quiet shade of the compound, before the eyes of six men and one woman, as much Deenah as himself.

And when the beating was over, they carefully tied up the pack of the Kabuli and sealed it without a single article missing.

Hearing a moan they looked over into the khud, where the monster Kabuli was coming to.

The old drum of the Kabuli tale constantly recurred, as if a trap door to the deeps were often lifted.

India had a different look to him--alien, sinister, of a depth of suffering undreamed of, because of the beating bass of the Kabuli tale, intensified by the sense that falling night would slacken the chase.

Yes, Chakkra remembered the five Kabuli men who had sat in the market-place.