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Arakanese
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Arakanese
Arakanese may refer to:
anything of or relating to Arakan, a region of Myanmar
anything of or relating to the Kingdom of Arakan, a former kingdom centred in the region
Arakanese people, an ethnic group of Arakan
Muslim Arakanese, or Rohingya, another ethnic group of the region
Arakanese language, a Tibeto-Burman
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Arakanese
Arakanese, a. and n. (ærəkəˈniːz) Also 9 Ar(r)acanese. [f. Arakan (see def.) + -ese.] A. adj. Of or pertaining to Arakan, a district on the west coast of Burma, or its inhabitants. B. n. 1. An inhabitant of Arakan. 2. The Burmese dialect spoken by the people of Arakan.1820 A. Judson Diary 20 Feb. in...
Oxford English Dictionary
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List of Arakanese monarchs
(Some Arakanese chronicles state the foundation of the kingdom a year later, 1430. Arakanese records give a day earlier, 1 January 1785.)
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Chin
Chin, n.2 (tʃɪn) [Burmese, ‘hill-man’.] One of a people inhabiting the Chin hills and adjacent districts in Burma; also, their language.1881 F. S. Copleston in Rep. Census Brit. Burma 68 In British Burma the Chins are very widely extended. 1882 [see Arakanese a. and n.]. 1951 R. Firth Elements Socia...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Arakan (disambiguation)
Arakan may also refer to:
Arakan Division, a British colonial division
Rakhine State, a province of Myanmar
Arakan Mountains, Myanmar
Arakanese people Arakanese Indians
Arakanese language, a former Tibeto-Burmese language, now split into two distinct languages: Rakhine and Marma
Arakan Campaign 1942–
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Arakan Division
The Burman Arakanese were mainly Buddhist. Both Burmese-Arakanese and Indo-Arakanese were elected as native members to the Legislature of Burma.
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Rakhine language
Consonants
The consonants of Arakanese are:
Arakanese largely shares the same set of consonant phonemes as standard Burmese, though Arakanese more prominently Vowels
The vowels of Arakanese are:
While Arakanese shares the same set of vowels as Burmese, Arakanese rhymes also diverge from Standard Burmese for
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Arakan
Tibeto-Burman Arakanese mostly speak the Arakanese language, also known as Rakhine and closely related to Burmese. Most Indo-Aryan Arakanese speak the Rohingya language.
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Nawarupa
Nawarupa (, also spelt nawa rupa; , ), also known as byala (Arakanese: ဗျာလ or ဗျာလ္လ), is a chimeric creature found in Burmese and Rakhine (Arakanese)
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Min Razagyi
Min Razagyi (Arakanese and , Arakanese pronunciation: , ; c. 1557–1612), also known as Salim Shah, was king of Arakan from 1593 to 1612. The Arakanese forces remained in Pegu for another month.
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Min Dikkha
Dikkha was an able military commander who led the Arakanese navy in Min Bin's conquest of Bengal in 1532–1533. He led the Royal Arakanese Navy in the Taungoo–Ava War (1538–45), and in the Taungoo–Mrauk-U War (1545–47).
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Rakhine Razawin Thit
Rakhine Razawin Thit (, , Arakanese pronunciation: ) is a Burmese chronicle covering the history of Arakan from time immemorial to the First Anglo-Burmese Published in 1931, it is a compilation of all extant prior Arakanese chronicles in a single narrative.
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Min Khamaung
Min Khamaung (Arakanese:မင်းခမောင်း; , Arakanese pronunciation: ;1557 - 1622) also known as Hussein Shah; was a king of Arakan from 1612 to 1622.
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Mayuppiya
Mayuppiya (Arakanese:မာရုမ္ပိယ, , Arakanese pronunciation: ;) was a king of the Mrauk-U Dynasty of Arakan.
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Gani Markan
Gani Markan was one of the first elected Arakanese Indian legislators in British Burma. This was because Arakanese Indians claimed to be a native community, whereas other Indians were immigrants.
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