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KHITAN SCRIPTS

  • Khitan large script
  • Chinese-based script for Khitan language

    large script, the Khitans simultaneously also used a functionally independent writing system known as the Khitan small script. Both Khitan scripts continued

    Khitan large script

    Khitan large script

    Khitan_large_script

  • Khitan scripts
  • Index of articles associated with the same name

    Khitan scripts may refer to one of two mutually exclusive scripts used by the Khitan people during the 10th–12th centuries: Khitan small script, invented

    Khitan scripts

    Khitan_scripts

  • Khitan small script
  • Chinese-based script for Khitan language

    a functionally independent writing system known as the Khitan large script. Both Khitan scripts continued to be in use to some extent by the Jurchens for

    Khitan small script

    Khitan small script

    Khitan_small_script

  • Khitan people
  • Nomadic people who founded the Liao dynasty in China

    Infobox ethnic group is being considered for merging. › The Khitan people (Khitan small script: ; Chinese: 契丹; pinyin: Qìdān) were a historical nomadic people

    Khitan people

    Khitan people

    Khitan_people

  • Jurchen script
  • Chinese-based script for Jurchen

    of scripts. After the Jurchen rebelled against the Khitan Liao dynasty and established the new Jin dynasty in 1115, they were using the Khitan script. In

    Jurchen script

    Jurchen script

    Jurchen_script

  • Liao dynasty
  • Khitan-led dynasty of China (916–1125)

    the Khitan scripts are functionally unintelligible to Chinese readers, and neither scripts have been fully deciphered to this day. The script had some

    Liao dynasty

    Liao dynasty

    Liao_dynasty

  • Khitan language
  • Para-Mongolic extinct language

    Khitan or Kitan ( in large script or in small, Khitai; Chinese: 契丹語, Qìdānyǔ), also known as Liao, is an extinct language once spoken in Northeast Asia

    Khitan language

    Khitan_language

  • Khitan
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    northeastern China Khitan language, a now-extinct language once spoken by the Khitan people Khitan scripts, writing systems of the Khitan people, for the

    Khitan

    Khitan

  • Mongolian writing systems
  • Writing systems devised for the Mongolian language

    Brahmi script. The Khitan spoke another proto-Mongolic language and developed two scripts for writing it: Khitan large script and Khitan small script, logographic

    Mongolian writing systems

    Mongolian writing systems

    Mongolian_writing_systems

  • Khitan Small Script (Unicode block)
  • Unicode character block

    Khitan Small Script is a Unicode block containing characters from the Khitan small script, which was used for writing the Khitan language spoken by the

    Khitan Small Script (Unicode block)

    Khitan_Small_Script_(Unicode_block)

  • Chinese family of scripts
  • Writing systems descended from oracle bone script

    are the Tangut script, Khitan large script, Khitan small script and its offspring, the Jurchen script, as well as the Yi script, Sui script, and Geba syllabary

    Chinese family of scripts

    Chinese family of scripts

    Chinese_family_of_scripts

  • List of Khitan inscriptions
  • scripts were used by the Khitan people in northern China during the 10th through 12th centuries for writing the extinct Khitan language. The Khitan language

    List of Khitan inscriptions

    List of Khitan inscriptions

    List_of_Khitan_inscriptions

  • Qara Khitai
  • Historical sinicized empire in Central Asia

    喀喇契丹; pinyin: Kālā Qìdān or Chinese: 黑契丹; pinyin: Hēi Qìdān; lit. 'Black Khitan'), also known as the Western Liao (Chinese: 西遼; pinyin: Xī Liáo), officially

    Qara Khitai

    Qara Khitai

    Qara_Khitai

  • Para-Mongolic languages
  • Proposed group of extinct languages

    could be possible. In the case of Khitan, there is rich evidence, but most of it is written in the two Khitan scripts (large and small) that have yet to

    Para-Mongolic languages

    Para-Mongolic_languages

  • Mongolic languages
  • Language family of Eurasia

    surviving evidence is very sparse, and Khitan, for which evidence exists that is written in the two Khitan scripts (large and small) which have as yet not

    Mongolic languages

    Mongolic languages

    Mongolic_languages

  • Nine-fold seal script
  • Stylised, rectilinear, folded form of Chinese calligraphy

    for the Khitan large script for use on Khitan-language seals. The Western Xia dynasty also developed a seal-script form of the Tangut script inspired

    Nine-fold seal script

    Nine-fold seal script

    Nine-fold_seal_script

  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Anzu (given name) Kyo (given name) Khitan scripts "Country" for Khitan large script "Ox" for Khitan small script To Father (杏), 2013 Chinese film starring

  • List of Jurchen inscriptions
  • contrast with inscriptions in Khitan scripts, there are no known examples of stone-inscribed epitaphs in the Jurchen script. Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap

    List of Jurchen inscriptions

    List of Jurchen inscriptions

    List_of_Jurchen_inscriptions

  • Nova N 176
  • Undeciphered manuscript codex written in the Mongolian Khitan large script

    manuscript is written in the Khitan large script, one of two largely undeciphered writing systems used for the now-extinct Khitan language during the 10th–12th

    Nova N 176

    Nova N 176

    Nova_N_176

  • List of writing systems
  • Ideographic scripts (in which graphemes are ideograms representing concepts or ideas rather than a specific word in a language) and pictographic scripts (in which

    List of writing systems

    List of writing systems

    List_of_writing_systems

  • Undeciphered writing systems
  • Writing systems and symbol systems without a generally accepted decipherment

    Proto-Elamite script Byblos syllabary Ba–Shu scripts – 5th to 4th century BCE.[citation needed] Khitan large script and Khitan small scriptKhitan, 10th century;

    Undeciphered writing systems

    Undeciphered writing systems

    Undeciphered_writing_systems

  • Khitan name
  • Personal names used by the Khitan People

    Khitan names are the personal names of the Khitan people which ruled the Liao dynasty (907–1125) in ancient China and Kara-Khitan Khanate (1124–1218)

    Khitan name

    Khitan_name

  • Liao dynasty coinage
  • Historical coinage of China

    Liao dynasty era coins have appeared in both Chinese and Khitan scripts. The coins in Khitan script do tend to have different character orders, Though these

    Liao dynasty coinage

    Liao dynasty coinage

    Liao_dynasty_coinage

  • Jurchen people
  • Tungusic-speaking people in East Asia

    Middle Chinese as Tsyu-li-tsyin (朱理真; Pinyin: Zhūlǐzhēn) and into Khitan small script as Julisen. The ethnonyms Sushen (Old Chinese: 肅慎 */siwk-[d]i[n]-s/)

    Jurchen people

    Jurchen people

    Jurchen_people

  • Aisin-Gioro Ulhicun
  • Chinese linguist of Manchu ethnicity (born 1958)

    ethnicity who is known for her studies of the Manchu, Jurchen and Khitan languages and scripts. She is also known as a historian of the Liao and Jin dynasties

    Aisin-Gioro Ulhicun

    Aisin-Gioro_Ulhicun

  • Manchu people
  • East Asian ethnic group

    return. Before the Jurchens overthrew the Khitan, married Jurchen women and Jurchen girls were raped by Liao Khitan envoys as a custom which caused resentment

    Manchu people

    Manchu people

    Manchu_people

  • Tungusic languages
  • Language family of Siberia and Manchuria

    (1115–1234). The Jurchens invented a Jurchen script to write their language based on the Khitan scripts. During this time, several stelae were put up

    Tungusic languages

    Tungusic languages

    Tungusic_languages

  • History of the Khitans
  • The history of the Khitans dates back to the 4th century. The Khitan people dominated much of northern China, Manchuria and the Mongolian Plateau. They

    History of the Khitans

    History of the Khitans

    History_of_the_Khitans

  • Kanji
  • Chinese characters used in Japanese writing

    logographic Chinese characters, historically adapted from Chinese writing scripts, used in the writing of Japanese. They comprised a major part of the Japanese

    Kanji

    Kanji

    Kanji

  • Memorial for Yelü Yanning
  • Khitan memorial

    Khitan word ⟨jau⟩ ("hundred") which occurs in line 13 of the upper-right Khitan section of the inscription and which is written with the large script

    Memorial for Yelü Yanning

    Memorial for Yelü Yanning

    Memorial_for_Yelü_Yanning

  • Chinese characters
  • Logographic writing system

    created scripts for their languages that were inspired by Chinese characters, but did not use them directly—these included the Khitan large script, Khitan small

    Chinese characters

    Chinese characters

    Chinese_characters

  • Jin Guangping
  • Chinese linguist

    these scripts was, and how the newly discovered scripts corresponded to the "large" and "small" Khitan and "large" and "small" Jurchen scripts that were

    Jin Guangping

    Jin_Guangping

  • Ideographic Symbols and Punctuation
  • Unicode character block

    Punctuation block: CJK Unified Ideographs CJK Symbols and Punctuation Khitan Small Script (Unicode block) Nushu (Unicode block) Tangut (Unicode block) Tangut

    Ideographic Symbols and Punctuation

    Ideographic_Symbols_and_Punctuation

  • List of Unicode characters
  • (Unicode block) Ideographic Description Characters (Unicode block) Khitan Small Script (Unicode block) Lisu (Unicode block) Lisu Supplement (Unicode block)

    List of Unicode characters

    List of Unicode characters

    List_of_Unicode_characters

  • Korea–Khitan War
  • 2023–2024 South Korean television series

    Korea–Khitan War (Korean: 고려 거란 전쟁; RR: Goryeo Georan jeonjaeng) is a 2023–2024 South Korean television series based on the 2018 South Korean novel Goryeo–Khitan

    Korea–Khitan War

    Korea–Khitan_War

  • List of scripts with no ISO 15924 code
  • writing scripts have not been allocated an ISO 15924 code. APL Avoiuli script Aztec script Badaga Bagam Balti A Balti B Bété Bhujimol script Borama Bronze

    List of scripts with no ISO 15924 code

    List_of_scripts_with_no_ISO_15924_code

  • List of Khitan rulers
  • The Khitan people (Khitan small script: ; Chinese: 契丹; pinyin: Qìdān) were a historical para-Mongolic nomadic people from Northeast Asia who, from the

    List of Khitan rulers

    List_of_Khitan_rulers

  • Hanja
  • Chinese characters used in Korean writing

    painting, a knowledge of Hanja is needed to write and understand the various scripts and inscriptions, as is the same in China and Japan. Many old songs and

    Hanja

    Hanja

    Hanja

  • List of Khitanologists
  • study of the Khitan people, their culture, religion, history, language and writing systems (Khitan large script and Khitan small script). List of sinologists

    List of Khitanologists

    List_of_Khitanologists

  • Chinese bronze inscriptions
  • Writing in a variety of Chinese scripts on ritual bronzes

    inscriptions are one of the earliest scripts in the Chinese family of scripts, preceded by the oracle bone script. For the early Western Zhou to early

    Chinese bronze inscriptions

    Chinese bronze inscriptions

    Chinese_bronze_inscriptions

  • Cursive script (East Asia)
  • Script style of Asian orthography

    related scripts may have difficulty reading the cursive script. The character 草 cǎo primarily means "grass", and the character 書 shū means script in this

    Cursive script (East Asia)

    Cursive script (East Asia)

    Cursive_script_(East_Asia)

  • Oracle bone script
  • Ancient form of written Chinese

    bone script in Unicode is being prepared. However, although Unicode Plane 3 (the Tertiary Ideographic Plane) is available for early Chinese scripts, there

    Oracle bone script

    Oracle bone script

    Oracle_bone_script

  • Script (Unicode)
  • Subset of characters in Unicode

    or "inherited" script property. However, the individual scripts often have their own punctuation and diacritics, so that many scripts include not only

    Script (Unicode)

    Script_(Unicode)

  • Chữ Hán
  • Chinese characters used in Vietnamese writing

    pp. 175–176. Nguyễn, Tuấn Cường (7 October 2019). "Research of square scripts in Vietnam: An overview and prospects". Journal of Chinese Writing Systems

    Chữ Hán

    Chữ Hán

    Chữ_Hán

  • Parhae
  • 7th-10th century kingdom in East Asia

    described as similar to, derived from, or affiliated with Goguryeo, Mohe, Khitan, and Tang cultural elements. However the exact nature of Parhae's relationship

    Parhae

    Parhae

    Parhae

  • List of Chinese cash coins by inscription
  • top-bottom-right-left. Liao dynasty era cash coins have appeared in both Chinese and Khitan scripts, but the latter can more accurately be described as a type of Chinese

    List of Chinese cash coins by inscription

    List of Chinese cash coins by inscription

    List_of_Chinese_cash_coins_by_inscription

  • Stephen Wootton Bushell
  • English physician (1844–1908)

    Stele'). Bushell discussed the Khitan small character and large character scripts in his article on the Jurchen script published in 1897, but did not

    Stephen Wootton Bushell

    Stephen Wootton Bushell

    Stephen_Wootton_Bushell

  • Goryeo–Khitan War
  • 10th and 11th century conflicts in Korea

    Goryeo–Khitan War (Chinese: 遼麗戰爭; Korean: 고려-거란 전쟁) was a series of 10th- and 11th-century conflicts between the Goryeo dynasty of Korea and the Khitan-led

    Goryeo–Khitan War

    Goryeo–Khitan War

    Goryeo–Khitan_War

  • Korean language
  • Language spoken in Korea

    the core Altaic proposal itself has lost most of its prior support. The Khitan language has several vocabulary items similar to Korean that are not found

    Korean language

    Korean language

    Korean_language

  • Manchu alphabet
  • Alphabet used to write the Manchu language

    the Manchu language. The Jurchen script has no relation to the Manchu alphabet, as it was derived from the Khitan script, itself derived from Chinese characters

    Manchu alphabet

    Manchu alphabet

    Manchu_alphabet

  • Neolithic symbols in China
  • Markings found at Neolithic sites in China

    symbols, collectively called Táo Wén (陶文 'pottery scripts'), have been compared to the oracle bone script — the earliest known forms of Chinese characters

    Neolithic symbols in China

    Neolithic_symbols_in_China

  • Abaoji
  • Emperor of the Liao dynasty from 916 to 926

    was a Khitan leader and the founding emperor of the Liao dynasty of China, ruling from 916 to 926. He had a sinicised name, Yelü Yi (with Khitan family

    Abaoji

    Abaoji

  • Clerical script
  • Chinese script widely used in the Han dynasty

    clerical scripts from the late Warring States period to the early Han dynasty. Clerical scripts with these features are called 'Han script' (汉隶; 漢隸)

    Clerical script

    Clerical script

    Clerical_script

  • Unicode
  • Character encoding standard

    handful of scripts—often primarily between a given script and Latin characters—not between a large number of scripts, and not with all of the scripts supported

    Unicode

    Unicode

    Unicode

  • Languages of China
  • The Khitans (Mongolic people) – Khitan language – Khitan large and small scripts The Tanguts (Sino-Tibetan people) – Tangut language – Tangut script During

    Languages of China

    Languages of China

    Languages_of_China

  • ISO 15924
  • Defines two sets of codes for a number of writing systems

    for the representation of names of scripts, is an international standard defining codes for writing systems or scripts (a "set of graphic characters used

    ISO 15924

    ISO_15924

  • Manchu language
  • Critically endangered Tungusic language

    script, which is derived from the Khitan script, which in turn was derived from Chinese characters. There is no relation between the Jurchen script and

    Manchu language

    Manchu_language

  • Jin dynasty (1115–1234)
  • Jurchen-led imperial dynasty of China

    but from a Sino-Khitan word combining the Middle Chinese title for king or prince (ong; wang in modern Mandarin Chinese) and a Khitan suffix. The name

    Jin dynasty (1115–1234)

    Jin dynasty (1115–1234)

    Jin_dynasty_(1115–1234)

  • List of constructed scripts
  • systems nor ciphers of existing scripts. * Script in ongoing development. Constructed script List of writing systems ConScript Unicode Registry "Echo Station

    List of constructed scripts

    List_of_constructed_scripts

  • Chinese script styles
  • Styles of writing Chinese characters

    Chinese script. There are also various major regional styles associated with various modern and historical polities. The traditional model of scripts appearing

    Chinese script styles

    Chinese_script_styles

  • Small seal script
  • Form of Chinese characters from the Qin dynasty

    the country, producing the 'scripts of the six states' (六國文字)—which were later collectively referred to as large seal script. This variance was considered

    Small seal script

    Small seal script

    Small_seal_script

  • Buda script
  • Archaic script used in Java and Bali

    script, Aksara Buda, or Gunung script is an archaic script. Based on its shape, the Buda Script still has a close relationship with the Kawi script.

    Buda script

    Buda_script

  • Seal script
  • Ancient style of Chinese characters

    Seal script or sigillary script (traditional Chinese: 篆書; simplified Chinese: 篆书; pinyin: Zhuànshū; lit. 'decorative engraving script') is a style of writing

    Seal script

    Seal script

    Seal_script

  • Jin–Song wars
  • 1125–1234 Jurchen campaigns in China

    Jin. The Khitan script, from the Chinese family of scripts, formed the basis of a national writing system for the empire, the Jurchen script. All three

    Jin–Song wars

    Jin–Song wars

    Jin–Song_wars

  • Plane (Unicode)
  • Continuous group of 65536 Unicode code points

    East Asian scripts: Ideographic Symbols and Punctuation (16FE0–16FFF) Tangut (17000–187FF) Tangut Components (18800–18AFF) Khitan Small Script (18B00–18CFF)

    Plane (Unicode)

    Plane_(Unicode)

  • Cathay
  • Alternative name for China in some languages

    external people circa 1000. The Khitans refer to themselves as Qidan (Khitan small script: ; Chinese: 契丹), but in the language of the ancient Uyghurs the final

    Cathay

    Cathay

    Cathay

  • Regular script
  • Style for writing Chinese characters

    (420–589); there was a variety of the regular script which emerged from neo-clerical as well as regular scripts known as 'Wei regular' (魏楷; Wèikǎi) or 'Wei

    Regular script

    Regular script

    Regular_script

  • Queue (hairstyle)
  • Hairstyle worn by the Jurchen and Manchu peoples of Manchuria

    clothing with Khitan clothing with Khitan boots and Han clothes or wearing Khitan clothes. Han women on the other hand did not adopt Khitan dress and continued

    Queue (hairstyle)

    Queue (hairstyle)

    Queue_(hairstyle)

  • Chinese numismatic charm
  • Decorative coins used for rituals

    the Khitan Liao dynasty that are written in Khitan script and, unlike Liao dynasty coins, were read counter-clockwise. Because the Khitan script hasn't

    Chinese numismatic charm

    Chinese numismatic charm

    Chinese_numismatic_charm

  • History of writing in Vietnam
  • phonetic scripts created by the Vietnamese themselves (when chữ Nôm is a logographic system created by the Vietnamese, Quốc Ngữ is a phonetic script created

    History of writing in Vietnam

    History of writing in Vietnam

    History_of_writing_in_Vietnam

  • Traditional Chinese characters
  • Standardized set of Chinese characters

    characters. Despite the debates on traditional and simplified Chinese, the two scripts are mutually intelligible to most native speakers, and many Chinese-language

    Traditional Chinese characters

    Traditional_Chinese_characters

  • Pierre Marsone
  • French sinologist

    "Le Ciel des Khitan", Journal asiatique, vol. 300, 2012–2, pp. 797-822. 2012. "The contribution of the latest decipherment of Khitan scripts for the history

    Pierre Marsone

    Pierre Marsone

    Pierre_Marsone

  • Wanyan Xiyin
  • Scribe

    new Jurchen (Jin) Empire. He based it on Chinese characters and the Khitan script. Shamanism in the Qing dynasty Tao (1976), Page 95. She was a concubine

    Wanyan Xiyin

    Wanyan_Xiyin

  • Xiao Yanyan
  • Empress Dowager Chengtian of Liao

    29 December 1009), also known as Empress Dowager Chengtian (承天皇太后) was a Khitan empress and military leader of imperial China's Liao dynasty. She was regent

    Xiao Yanyan

    Xiao Yanyan

    Xiao_Yanyan

  • Yang Kyu
  • Goryeo commander (fl. 11th century)

    served the Goryeo dynasty. He fought in the second conflict in the Goryeo–Khitan War. During the reign of King Mokjong, Yang Kyu served as the director of

    Yang Kyu

    Yang_Kyu

  • Dae Jo-yeong (TV series)
  • South Korean television series

    Jo-yeong runs into the Khitans and meets Chulin (Chorin in Korean), a Khitan princess, and Li Kaigu (Li Haego in Korean), a Khitan general. Li Kaigu soon

    Dae Jo-yeong (TV series)

    Dae_Jo-yeong_(TV_series)

  • Mongolian language
  • Official language of Mongolia

    texts were written in four scripts (not counting some vocabulary written in Western scripts): Uyghur Mongolian (UM) script (an adaptation of the Uyghur

    Mongolian language

    Mongolian language

    Mongolian_language

  • List of Mongolians
  • son. This isn't actually a depiction of Dashi but simply that of a Kara-Khitan man. Lenin never spoke of his origins, and other ethnicities have been proposed

    List of Mongolians

    List_of_Mongolians

  • Kang Kamch'an
  • Korean general (948–1031)

    official, he is best known for his military victories during the Third Goryeo-Khitan War. Kang came from the Geumju Kang clan. Kang was born on 22 December 948

    Kang Kamch'an

    Kang Kamch'an

    Kang_Kamch'an

  • Chinggeltei
  • Chinese Mongol linguist (1924–2013)

    Chinggeltei published his Study of the Lesser Khitan Script , a significant milestone in the study of the Khitan language and its writing system. He was presented

    Chinggeltei

    Chinggeltei

  • Yelü Diela
  • Inventor of the Khitan small script (c.925)

    "Khitan small script" to accommodate the more agglutinative Khitan language around the year 925. The script was based partly on the earlier "Khitan large

    Yelü Diela

    Yelü_Diela

  • Jilin Provincial Museum
  • Provincial museum in Jilin, China

    gilding from Buyeo Bronze mirrors with Khitan script A painted, stone-cut Khitan pagoda Murals from the Khitan Kulun tombs There are a number of permanent

    Jilin Provincial Museum

    Jilin Provincial Museum

    Jilin_Provincial_Museum

  • Sixteen Prefectures
  • Historical region in North China

    the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, the region was ceded to the Khitan-led Liao dynasty in 938 AD by Shi Jingtang, who desperately sought Liao

    Sixteen Prefectures

    Sixteen Prefectures

    Sixteen_Prefectures

  • Hyeonjong of Goryeo
  • King of Goryeo from 1009 to 1031

    Ch'i-yang. During his reign, the Goryeo dynasty fought two wars against the Khitan Liao dynasty. Today Hyeonjong is considered to be among the greatest leaders

    Hyeonjong of Goryeo

    Hyeonjong_of_Goryeo

  • Sawndip
  • Writing system for the Zhuang language

    domains, Sawndip is more often used than alphabetical scripts. Sawndip is also called old Zhuang script, usually used to distinguish it from the Latin-based

    Sawndip

    Sawndip

    Sawndip

  • Topics referred to by the same term

    (surname), a Chinese surname Oh (Japanese surname), a Japanese surname a Khitan small script This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same

  • Large seal script
  • Chinese character forms c. 1050–400 BCE

    rectilinear clerical script style prominent during the Han. As a result, the 'large' and 'small' terms emerged to refer to the respective scripts. The Han-era

    Large seal script

    Large seal script

    Large_seal_script

  • Chŏng Sŏng
  • Goryeo military commander (fl. 11th century)

     11th century) was a Goryeo military commander during the Second Goryeo-Khitan War. In 1010, Chŏng Sŏng was the garrison commander (진사; 鎭使; chinsa) of

    Chŏng Sŏng

    Chŏng_Sŏng

  • Juha Janhunen
  • Finnish linguist (born 1952)

    edition of two newly discovered Liao dynasty epitaphs written in the Khitan small script.[citation needed] Janhunen has also worked along with Ekaterina Gruzdeva

    Juha Janhunen

    Juha_Janhunen

  • Yelü Chucai
  • Khitan adviser to Genghis Khan (1190–1244)

    recorded person to be able to speak the Khitan language and read and write the Khitan large and small scripts. Temple of Azure Clouds 宋子貞:《中書令耶律公神道碑》,節選自蘇天爵編集的《元文類》卷五七。

    Yelü Chucai

    Yelü Chucai

    Yelü_Chucai

  • Idu script
  • Archaic Korean language writing system

    p. 222. ISBN 9780199585847. Kornicki, Peter Francis (2018). Languages, scripts, and Chinese texts in East Asia. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 197

    Idu script

    Idu script

    Idu_script

  • Gamaksan (Gyeonggi)
  • Mountain in South Korea

    the mountain has been the site of several battles, including during the Khitan invasion, and it was also the main theatre of the Battle of Gorangpo, during

    Gamaksan (Gyeonggi)

    Gamaksan (Gyeonggi)

    Gamaksan_(Gyeonggi)

  • Hyōgai kanji
  • Japanese kanji not in the lists of jōyō kanji

    Oracle bone script Bronze scripts Seal script large small bird-worm Hanja Kanji Chữ Nôm Sawndip Bowen Chinese-influenced Jurchen Khitan large script Sui Tangut

    Hyōgai kanji

    Hyōgai_kanji

  • List of languages by first written account
  • Linear B script". British Museum. Archived from the original on 2015-05-04. Retrieved 7 May 2015. Bennett, Emmett L. (1996). "Aegean scripts". In Daniels

    List of languages by first written account

    List_of_languages_by_first_written_account

  • Proto-Mongols
  • People and tribes in and around the Mongol Plateau before the 11th or 12th century

    in the end of Turkic dominance on the Mongolian Plateau. The Para-Mongol Khitan people founded the Liao dynasty (916–1125) and ruled Mongolia and portions

    Proto-Mongols

    Proto-Mongols

  • Yelü Dashi
  • Emperor of Western Liao from 1124 to 1143

    of Liao. The History of Liao describes him as "well-versed in Khitan and Chinese scripts, excelled in riding and archery, and had passed the highest imperial

    Yelü Dashi

    Yelü_Dashi

  • Karluks
  • Medieval Turkic tribal confederacy of Central Asia

    domination of the Khitans. The Khitan exiles, headed by Yelü Dashi, a member of the Khitan royal family, migrated westwards. The Khitans settled in the Tarbagatai

    Karluks

    Karluks

  • Japanese script reform
  • Attempt to correlate standard spoken Japanese with the written word

    The Japanese script reform is the attempt to correlate standard spoken Japanese with the written word, which began during the Meiji period. This issue

    Japanese script reform

    Japanese_script_reform

  • Kokuji
  • Japanese-made kanji

    Chinese characters Chinese family of scripts Written Chinese Kanji Hanja Chữ Hán Evolution of script styles Neolithic symbols in China Oracle bone Bronze

    Kokuji

    Kokuji

    Kokuji

  • Daur people
  • Mongolian ethnic group

    been devised by a native Daur scholar. The Dagur language retains some Khitan substratal features, including a number of lexemes not found in other Mongolic

    Daur people

    Daur people

    Daur_people

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Online names & meanings

  • Faxon
  • Boy/Male

    German Teutonic

    Faxon

    Long-haired.

  • Moates
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Norwich)

    Moates

    English (Norwich) : variant of Moat.

  • RINA
  • Female

    Hebrew

    RINA

     Variant spelling of Hebrew unisex Rinnah, RINA means "shouting for joy." Compare with other forms of Rina.

  • Vibhavasu | விபாவாஸு
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Vibhavasu | விபாவாஸு

    The Sun

  • Sanskrithi | ஸஂஸ்கரதீ
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Sanskrithi | ஸஂஸ்கரதீ

    Culture

  • Navdip
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Navdip

    New Flame

  • Roth
  • Boy/Male

    German Scottish

    Roth

    Red. Surname.

  • Vajasi
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Vajasi

  • ZENOBIOS
  • Male

    Greek

    ZENOBIOS

    (Ζηνόβιος) Masculine form of Greek Zenobia, ZENOBIOS means "life of Zeus." 

  • Haardika
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Haardika

    Heartedly

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Other words and meanings similar to

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KHITAN SCRIPTS

  • Mail-shell
  • n.

    A chiton.

  • Entomolin
  • n.

    See Chitin.

  • Emblanch
  • v. t.

    To whiten. See Blanch.

  • Dealbate
  • v. t.

    To whiten.

  • Whitening
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Whiten

  • Whiten
  • v. i.

    To grow white; to turn or become white or whiter; as, the hair whitens with age; the sea whitens with foam; the trees in spring whiten with blossoms.

  • Kaftan
  • n & v.

    See Caftan.

  • Whitened
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Whiten

  • Chitin
  • n.

    A white amorphous horny substance forming the harder part of the outer integument of insects, crustacea, and various other invertebrates; entomolin.

  • Elytrin
  • n.

    See Chitin.

  • Chiton
  • n.

    An under garment among the ancient Greeks, nearly representing the modern shirt.

  • Whiten
  • v. t.

    To make white; to bleach; to blanch; to whitewash; as, to whiten a wall; to whiten cloth.

  • Cathay
  • n.

    China; -- an old name for the Celestial Empire, said have been introduced by Marco Polo and to be a corruption of the Tartar name for North China (Khitai, the country of the Khitans.)

  • Chitinous
  • a.

    Having the nature of chitin; consisting of, or containing, chitin.

  • Chiton
  • n.

    One of a group of gastropod mollusks, with a shell composed of eight movable dorsal plates. See Polyplacophora.

  • Decolorize
  • v. t.

    To deprive of color; to whiten.

  • Bleach
  • v. i.

    To grow white or lose color; to whiten.