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Definition of Luyia
1. Noun. A Bantu language.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Luyia
Literary usage of Luyia
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Kenya by Eva Ambros (1999)
"This is also true, to a greater extent, of the luyia, who do not in fact consist
of a single tribe, but rather of a grouping of 16 distinct tribes that ..."
2. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1909)
"To his scientific fancies belonged the development of the so-called Theo- luyia
paradisiaca, ie, that Adam, the patriarchs, and the whole Old Testament ..."
3. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1855)
"Isaac luyia, the tradition of, xxxiii. 629. Isaacs, Dr, birthday ode for Charles
Edward by, x. 372. Isaacson's life of Bishop Andrews, remarks on, xxvi. ..."
4. The Dictionary of English History; by Sidney Low, Sidney James Mark Low Sir, Frederick Sanders Pulling (1897)
"... luyia, vol. xxxii.) inclines, though with more moderation, to a similar view.
Mr. Freeman (Л'огт. Conq., vol. i., note B) leans to " an intermediate ..."
5. Journal of the Transactions of the Victoria Institute, Or Philosophical by Victoria Institute (Great Britain) (1880)
"... and Hermes-Trismegistos (Tet-Thoth, ie Thought or Intellect); and there is
still extant a work entitled Mat/ilia luyia ton apo ton ..."
6. Pharmacographia; a History of the Principal Drugs of Vegetable Origin, Met by Friedrich August Flückiger, Daniel Hanbury (1879)
"... or 'luyia. So Styrax officinalis L., from the resemblance of its leaves to
those of Pints Cydonia L., is known in Greece as ..."