The Read Online Free
  • Latest Novel
  • Hot Novel
  • Completed Novel
  • Popular Novel
  • Author List
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Young Adult
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Far Pavilions

    Previous Page Next Page

      Mahout elephant driver

      Mali gardener

      Malik tribal headman

      ‘Maro!’ ‘Strike!’; ‘Kill!’

      ‘Mubarik!’ ‘Congratulations!’; ‘Well done!’

      Mullah Mohammedan priest

      Munshi teacher; writer

      Narwar coarse webbing

      Nauker servant

      Nauker-log servants

      Nautch–girl dancing girl

      Nullah ravine or dry water-course

      Ooloo owl

      Padishah Empress

      Pan betel-nut rolled in a bay leaf and chewed

      Panchayat council of five elders

      Patarkar small firework

      Piara (-i) dear

      Pice small coin

      Pujah worship

      Pulton infantry regiment

      Punkah length of matting or heavy material pulled by a rope to make a breeze

      Purdah seclusion of women (literally, curtain)

      Pushtu the language of the Pathans

      Raja King

      Rajkumar Prince

      Rajkumari Princess

      Rakhri pendant worn on the forehead

      Rang colour

      Rani Queen

      Resai quilt

      Resaidar junior Indian officer promoted from the ranks (cavalry)

      Risaldar senior Indian officer promoted from the ranks (cavalry)

      Risaldar-Major the most senior Indian officer promoted from the ranks (cavalry)

      Rissala cavalry (regiment)

      Sadhu holy man

      Sahiba lady

      Sahib-log ‘white folk’

      Saht-bai ‘seven brothers' – small brown birds which go about in groups, usually of seven

      Sepoy infantry soldier

      Serai caravan hostel

      ‘Shabash!’ ‘Well done!’

      Shadi wedding

      Shaitan devil

      Shamianah large tent

      Shikar hunting and shooting

      Shikari hunter, finder of game

      Shulwa sleeved tunic

      Sikunder Dulkhan

      Alexander the Great

      Sirdar Indian officer of high rank

      Sirkar the Indian Government

      Sowar cavalry trooper

      Syce groom

      Tálash inquiry

      Tamarsha show; festival

      Tar telegram (literally, wire)

      Tehsildar village headman

      Tiffin lunch

      Tonga two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle

      Tulwar curved sword

      Yakdan leather trunk, made to be carried on mules

      Yuveraj heir to the throne

      Zenana women's quarter

      Zid resentment

      Zulum aggression

      *baby; child

      *the Mohammedan Sabbath

      † Indian infantrymen

      * great man

      * Sleep baby sleep, Butter, bread, sugar, The bread and butter are finished, My baby is asleep.

      * light two-wheeled trap

      *sowars = cavalry soldiers; sepoys = infantry

      *big dinner-parties

      † bad characters; riff-raff

      * uproar, tumult

      *The battle that gained India for Clive and the East India Company in 1757. (There was a legend that the rule of the Company would only last a hundred years from that date.)

      * Hindu holy man

      * tight-fitting three-quarter-length coat

      * doctor

      * pronounced Ma-darn

      *Be silent!

      *a Hindu form of blessing, literally ‘Live long’

      * cart or carriage

      * village headman

      *1 koss = 2 miles

      *drivers of horse-drawn vehicles

      *mail carriage (dâk literally post, mail, posting-house)

      *sun-blind made of split cane

      *for me too

      *thanks be to God

      *Princesses

      *nonsense (literally, stupidity)

      *kaka = paternal uncle

      *Highness

      *nymphs of the Mohammedan paradise

      *part of the Vedic literature

      *Your honour

      * You have permission to go

      * Literally young men: but also used colloquially to mean soldiers.

      *my son

      * Before India was taken over from the East India Company by the Crown, the title was Governor-General. The last of these was Sir John Lawrence.

      * Fear not. Be strong. Bravo!

      * Thank you

      *Now it is finished

      *Here lies Barbur the great Emperor. May his fame live for ever.

      * Go back and get your muskets. On! On!

      * Forward, brothers. On – Victory to the Guides.

      * strike; kill.

      * Please. Enough. Stop!

     


     

      M. M. Kaye, The Far Pavilions

      (Series: # )

     

     


     

     
    Thank you for reading books on BookFrom.Net

    Share this book with friends

    Previous Page Next Page
© The Read Online Free 2022~2026