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Definition of Mongols
1. n. pl. One of the great races of man, including the greater part of the inhabitants of China, Japan, and the interior of Asia, with branches in Northern Europe and other parts of the world. By some American Indians are considered a branch of the Mongols. In a more restricted sense, the inhabitants of Mongolia and adjacent countries, including the Burats and the Kalmuks.
Definition of Mongols
1. Proper noun. (plural of Mongol) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mongols
1. mongol [n] - See also: mongol
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mongols
Literary usage of Mongols
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Outline of History: Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind by Herbert George Wells (1921)
"The Rise and Victories of the Mongols. § 3. The Travels of Marco Polo. ...
The Mongols and the Gipsies. WE have to tell now of the last and greatest of all ..."
2. The American Antiquarian and Oriental Journal by Stephen Denison Peet (1908)
"In India nearly all populations are classified with Mongols, and so it is with
Persia. Even in Europe the Huns, Turks, and Magyars are Mongols. ..."
3. The History of Russia from the Earliest Times to 1877 by Alfred Rambaud, Graeme Mercer Adam (1904)
"CHAPTER X. THE TATAR Mongols. ENSLAVEMENT OF RUSSIA. Origin and manners of the
Mongols—Battles of the Kalka, of Riazan, at Kolomna, and of the Sit—Conquest ..."
4. The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise by Henry Smith Williams (1909)
"THE Mongols UNDER JENGHIZ KHAN INVADE "WESTERN ASIA Jenghiz Khan was already
ruler of Tatary and Northern China when he directed his movements westward and ..."
5. The History of China by Demetrius Charles de Kavanagh Boulger (1898)
"THE Sungs had been induced to ally themselves with the Mongols by the desire to
... The Sungs knew nothing of the Mongols, whereas the Kins were their ..."
6. Philosophy of History by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, John Sibree (1902)
"With China and the Mongols—the realm of theocratic ) despotism—History begins.
Both have the patriarchal constitution for their principle—so modified in ..."
7. Through Asia by Sven Anders Hedin (1899)
"In an expansion of the valley we met a party of mounted Mongols, all armed to
the teeth. ... The troop of Mongols consisted of five men and one woman. ..."
8. Mediaeval and Modern History by Philip Van Ness Myers (1905)
"Our attention is now drawn to a third invasion, this time from the east, by
nomadic races of Asia, — the Mongols and the Ottoman Turks.1 The ultimate ..."