Wiktionary
n. 1 (context historical English) A chief worker or a supervisor, who oversees the work of other workers. 2 (context Malaysia Singapore Indonesia English) A workman who oversees others in a factory or a plantation, typically an oil palm or rubber estate.
Wikipedia
Mandor is an ILRC and village in Phagi Tehsil in Jaipur district, Rajasthan.
Mandor has seven patwar circles - Kansel, Pachala, Mandor, Rotwara, Ladana, Sawai Jaisinghpura and Sultaniya.
Based on 2011 census, Mandor has 158 households with total population of 1,191 (51.89% males, 48.11% females). Total area of village is 11.55 km. There is one primary school in the village.
Usage examples of "mandor".
I speak for the High King, he of the High Demesne, most puissant, most terrible, who comes now in might to call Great Game against Mandor, styled Prince of Bannerwell, who has in most unprincely fashion given sanctuary to traitorous and miscreant pawns, abductors of the old, holders for base ransom the valued friend of Prionde, High King.
It just so happened that the commander of the Asturian archers Pol brought down onto the eastern side of the plain of Mimbre was a fiery young nobleman, the Baron of Wildantor, and the knight who led my Mimbrate bridge-wreckers was the Baron of Vo Mandor.
The Powers cared, perhaps, about themselves, about each other, about heavy cosmic principles, about the Unicorn and the Serpent, of which they were very probably but geometric manifestations They did not care about me, about Coral, about Mandor, probably not even about Oberon or Dworkin himself.
A moment later and that figure followed him, emerging into substantiality and shifting from an octopal ape form to that of my brother Mandor, humanized, wearing black as when last I had seen him, though the garments were fresh and of a slightly different cut, his white hair less tousled.
Mandor immediately rose, circled the table, and refilled her goblet, interposing himself between us.
I felt Jasra and Mandor reaching also, and I tried again, joining forces with them.
Chance reminded me of our last traveling by water, fleeing before the wind and from a ship full of pawners sent by Mandor of Bannerwell to capture me.
I was considering what Mandor had said about my tunnel vision and lack of preparedness and had just about concluded that he was right, that in nearly everything that had happened to me up to this point—.