pallah

answer Answers

ProphetesAI is thinking...

MindMap

Loading...

Sources

1
pallah
pallah (ˈpælə) Also palla, paala, pala, phalla, phaala. [ad. Sechwana p'hala, Zulu im-pala.] An antelope (æpyceros melampus) inhabiting parts of S. Africa; it is dark-reddish above, dull-yellowish on the sides, and white beneath; the male has horns about twenty inches long and spreading in a lyrate ... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 3.0 0.0
2
Phallah
Government Middle School and primary School for boys at Pallah Gali. wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 1.5 0.0
3
impala
impala (ɪmˈpɑːlə, -ˈpælə) Also impalla, mpala. = pallah.1875 W. H. Drummond Large Game & Nat. Hist. S. & S.-E. Afr. vii. 330 The roibok or impalla..is about the size of a small reed-buck doe, though more slenderly made. Ibid., These impalla..could easily distance any dog I possessed. 1886 W. M. Kerr... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.90000004 0.0
4
Impala
Etymology The first attested English name, in 1802, was palla or pallah, from the Tswana 'red antelope'; the name impala, also spelled impalla or mpala wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.6 0.0
5
palla
▪ I. ‖ palla (ˈpælə) [L., perh. related to pallium.] 1. Rom. Antiq. A loose outer garment or wrap worn out of doors by women (sometimes by men); an outer robe, mantle.1706 in Phillips. 1834 Lytton Pompeii iii. ix, The slave..divested herself also of her long palla. 1866 J. B. Rose tr. Ovid's Met. 72... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.6 0.0
6
pala
▪ I. pala Ent. (ˈpɑːlə) Pl. palæ. [a. L. pāla spade.] (See quot. 1906.) Hence ˈpalar a., of or pertaining to a pala.1892 E. Saunders Hemiptera Heteroptera Brit. Islands 336 C[orixa] Fallenii... The palæ of the male are truncate at the base. 1906 J. B. Smith Explanation Terms Entomol. 95 Pala: the sh... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.3 0.0
7
waterbok
‖ waterbok (ˈwɔːtəbɒk) Also 9 -boc, -bock; and see water-buck. [a. Du. waterbok, f. water water n. + bok (see buck n.1 1 e).] = water-buck.1835 A. Smith Diary 20 Sept. (1940) II. 240 The flesh coarse-grained and exactly like the flesh of the waterbok. c 1850 Nat. Encycl. I. 813 The other, a waterboc... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.3 0.0
8
bag
▪ I. bag, n. (bæg) Forms: 3–7 bagge, 6–7 bagg, 4– bag. [Early ME. bagge: cf. ON. baggi ‘bag, pack, bundle’ (not elsewhere in Teutonic); also OF. bague, Pr. bagua baggage, med.L. baga chest, sack. The Eng. was possibly from the ON.; but the source of this, as well as of the Romanic words, is unknown;... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.3 0.0