English | German | Russian | Czech

khan English

Meaning khan meaning

What does khan mean?
Definitions in simple English

khan

An Ottoman sultan. A noble or man of rank in various Muslim countries of Central Asia, including Afghanistan. A resting-place for a travelling caravan.

khan

a title given to rulers or other important people in Asian countries (= caravansary) an inn in some eastern countries with a large courtyard that provides accommodation for caravans

Synonyms khan synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as khan?

Khan English » English

khan

Examples khan examples

How do I use khan in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Kublai Khan established the Yuan Dynasty in 1271.
Genghiz Khan is a famous historical figure.

Movie subtitles

NARRATOR: Legendary was the Xanadu where Kubla Khan decreed his stately pleasure dome.
Moscow hasn't a chance. Our great Khan send this present.
Listen, Khan!
They are ready to surrender the city to the Khan of the Crimea.
Particularly the maneuver that Genghis Khan employed in the battle of Kinsha in 1221.
Ali Khan?
No, not Ali Khan.
I command you in the name of Kublai Khan!
Kublai Khan?
Kublai Khan's summer palace is in Shang Tu.
Well, at the Khan's court in Peking, I have seen Buddhist monks make cups of wine fly through the air unaided and offer themselves to the Great Khan's lips.
The Warlord Tegana is a special emissary from the camp of the great Mongol Lord Khan Noghai, who has been at war with Kublai Khan.
The deed indicates that its owner is a direct heir to Genghis Khan!
Trouble with Khan Mir Jutra.
A strong force, Khan Sahib.
Khan Sahib!
Hardly an ingratiating way for a home-government man to present himself on a delicate mission to the Surat Khan.
His Highness Surat Khan, amir of Suristan offers a prayer of gratitude that you have been preserved in your journey. And places his household and all in it at the disposal of the illustrious envoy of her most gracious majesty, Queen Victoria.
Fine fellow, the khan.
Besides, I've come to know the khan pretty well.
The khan wants you to take first shot, Sir.
I don't quite understand Surat Khan's presence in Calcutta, Sir.
Surat Khan, deviling us up on the frontier seems to be doing precisely what the Russian czar is doing in the Balkans.
One would think that there's Russian influence at the back of Surat Khan.
Surat Khan's just arrived. -Well?
Alexander the Great and Genghis Khan did too.
Heard he went with his son to the Khan in Bakhchysarai.
Khan forced you to give up the son and you agreed?
Illustrious Khan Islam Giray ordered me to help you with a sword in a fight with the Polack camp.
His Serene Highness Khan Islam Giray Khan ordered to assist, ours won't assault the castle!
Khiva Khan announced that he skinned him alive!
Yes, yes, that was done to me by Khan of Khiva, uh.
Feofar Khan, the emir of Bukhara rebelled against my authority, Raises an army on my own territory, Invaded and devastated the eastern Siberia.
Feofar Khan destroyed the only telegraph line linking Moscow to Irkutsk.
Feofar Khan has not been surprised once.
The latest reports that have reached us before the destruction of the telegraph line. Indicate that a former senior officer of your majesty had set to service Feofar Khan and his Tartars.
Its presence with Feofar Khan. Gives the revolt of the Tartar a particularly dangerous significance.
I'd like it even seems that Feofar Khan of vanguards reached the banks of the Irtysh.

News and current affairs

But revelations about the nuclear weapons smuggling network organized by A. Q. Khan, the father of Pakistan's bomb, confirm the danger I predicted back then.
It is not too late to learn the lessons of the misadventures of A. Q. Khan.
Dr. Khan allegedly also supplied a detailed nuclear weapon design that US experts say is of a 1964 Chinese vintage passed on to Pakistan two decades ago.
This disclosure raises interesting new questions because Dr Khan was peripheral to actual weapons-related work.
One, once headed by Dr. Khan, is responsible for producing bomb-grade uranium gas that, when converted to metal, provides the crucial fuel for a nuclear explosion.
Dr. Khan was barely mentioned by the head of the NDC, Dr. Samar Mubarakmand, in his victory speeches after the successful May 1998 nuclear tests.
Thus the mystery: how could Dr. Khan - who had no need to possess weapons design information - have handed over detailed bomb design documents to Libya?
Dr. Khan's televised confession and acceptance of sole responsibility for proliferation activities has done nothing to reduced suspicion that there is more here than meets the eye, and of the Pakistani military's complicity in proliferation.
Dr. Khan's export of centrifuge technology was unknown to successive governments in Pakistan, says the country's leader, General Pervez Musharraf.
But for over a decade, Dr. Khan had openly advertised his nuclear wares.
In earlier years, Dr. Khan and his collaborators published a number of papers detailing critical issues regarding the balancing of centrifuges and magnetic bearings.
Dr. Khan's proliferation activitiesIt could scarcely be more blatant.
Obviously, Pakistani Prime Minister Mir Zafarulla Khan Jamali will be able to offer no satisfactory answer to this question--not when he has to go home and report to his boss, the General-turned-President Pervez Musharraf.
The very next day, however, Pakistan's Foreign Office spokesman, Masood Khan, claimed that President Musharraf was prepared to drop this demand.
If it used the centrifuges that it purchased from Pakistan's nuclear impresario A.Q. Khan, it could have enough fissile material to produce 20 bombs.
Saudi Arabia also invested in Pakistan's nuclear weapons program, the so-called Sunni Bomb, by directly financing the research of A. Q. Khan, the father of the Pakistani effort.
Majid Khan - and there are many more like him - is a classic product of the Bush administration's disregard for the fundamental principles of the rule of law.
In February, Syria's state news agency accused jihadi rebels of firing a rocket containing chemical materials in Khan al-Assal - an allegation that the British television outlet Channel Four backs.
Yahya Khan responded by sending in the troops.
Fourth, export controls have failed to prevent the spread of sensitive nuclear technology, not least due to the sophisticated efforts of clandestine networks like the one run by Pakistani nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan.
Most new revelations about Pakistan's nuclear scandal focus on the clandestine supply of uranium enrichment technology to Iran, North Korea, and Libya by the celebrated bomb-maker Dr. A. Q. Khan.
To protect itself, Pakistan's desperate military establishment, fearful of being labelled a proliferator and of ultimately being deprived of its nukes, has chosen to sacrifice Dr. Khan.
Ten days later, he addressed a mammoth public meeting at the city's Minar-e-Pakistan grounds, where, a year earlier, the cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan had launched what he not very appropriately termed a political tsunami.

Are you looking for...?