Definition of Mahuas

1. mahua [n] - See also: mahua

Lexicographical Neighbors of Mahuas

mahonias
mahoohoo
mahoosive
mahori
mahorka
mahout
mahouts
mahr
mahseer
mahseers
mahsir
mahsirs
mahua
mahuang
mahuangs
mahuas (current term)
mahurat
mahurats
mahusive
mahwa
mahwa tree
mahwas
mahzor
mahzorim
mahzors
mai tai
mai tais
maia
maian
maiasaur

Literary usage of Mahuas

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Narrative and Critical History of America by Justin Winsor (1889)
"From the fourth to the seventh century the mahuas occupy the Mexican plateau, i. 137. The Chinese alleged to have reached Fou- sang, i. ..."

2. An Historical Sketch of the Native States of India in Subsidiary Alliance by George Bruce Malleson (1875)
"In 1808, for instance, he made an embankment across the mahuas Nai, the river flowing into the Bharatpur territory, and supplying its people ..."

3. The Forests of Upper India and Their Inhabitants by Thomas W. Webber (1902)
"Teak thrives well, and is found along the banks of the Betwa river, but no fine trees exist, except the usual fruit-trees, mahuas and mangoes, ..."

4. Studies in Spanish-American Literature by Isaac Goldberg, Jeremiah Denis Matthias Ford (1920)
"They civilized the Chaldeans, the Egyptians and the Greeks, the mahuas and the Mayas. They have given back to many men, in the clear nights of the trenches, ..."

5. The World's Inhabitants, Or Mankind, Animals, and Plants: Being a Popular by George Thomas Bettany (1888)
"If the woman gets up and begins cooking the game, she is considered to have accepted his offer; but marriage I'mahuas, ..."

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