Wikipedia
Khel may refer to:
- Khel (clan), a Pashtun tribal division
- KHEL-LP, a radio station licensed to serve Rogers, Arkansas, United States
- Khel (1992 film), a Hindi romantic comedy starring Madhuri Dixit and Anil Kapoor
- Khel – No Ordinary Game, a 2003 Hindi action film starring Sunny Deol, Sunil Shetty and Celina Jaitley
Khel are sub-tribes of Pashtun (Afghan) tribes in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The title of the tribe ends in Zai and its sub-tribe name end in Khel. Khel is also a common final element in the names of villages in Afghanistan and in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa of Pakistan.
Some of the clans of Pashtun tribes:
- Khwaja Khel
- Khizar Khel Isakhel ( Niazi)
- Ahmed Khel Isakhel ( Niazi)
- Daulat Khel
- Isa Khel
- Edo-Khel
- Hafiz Khel
- Kakakhel
- Akhunkhel
- Maghdud Khel
- Mahmud Khel
- Mahsud Khel
- Miankhel
- Umar Khel
- Uthman khel
- Yusaf Khel
- Bakhshe Khel
- Musakhel
bakhsi khel and basi khel is one unit but some different of language speaking changed a whol tribe
Khel is a Hindi film that released in India in 1992. This romantic comedy was directed by actor and film-maker Rakesh Roshan. Anil Kapoor, Madhuri Dixit, Sonu Walia, Anupam Kher and Mala Sinha form its main cast. Khel is one of the almost dozen films that Anil Kapoor and Madhuri Dixit have done together.
The film's plot is similar to Hollywood films Bedtime Story and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.
Usage examples of "khel".
Zakka Khel Afridi raiding down from the hills for guns and women, firing from the hip as they come.
By this treaty, the French king yielded to the emperor old Brisac, with all its dependencies, Fribourg, the forts in the Brisgau and Black Forest, together with Fort Khel.
The situation was also aggravated by the appearance of large numbers of tribesmen from the Utman Khel country, who crowded the hills to the west of the camp, and thus compelled the defenders to hold a greatly extended line.
The garrison were able to distinguish these new-comers from the Swatis, Utman Khels, Mamunds, Salarzais and others, by the black or dark-blue clothes they wore.
Of a hundred rifles, which the Utman Khels had surrendered, nearly a third were condemned Government Martinis, and displayed the Government stamp.
On the opposite bank of the river were the dwellings of the Utman Khels, and in an area seven miles by three, I counted forty-six separate castles, complete with moats, towers and turrets.
Again all were struck by the great array of castles on the Utman Khel side of the valley.
There Sir Bindon Blood received the submission of the Utman Khels, who brought in the weapons demanded from them, and paid a fine as an indemnity for attacking the Malakand and Chakdara.
After the Utman Khels had been induced to comply with the terms, the brigades recrossed the Panjkora River, and then marching by easy stages down the line of communications, returned to the Malakand.
The paradox of kinship ties and a sense of social identity that permeated the khel from Masheikh down to the lowliest Domel was not a paradox to Waff.