Kulin

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Kulin may refer to:

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Kon or KON may refer to:

Baba and similar words may refer to:

Koch may refer to:

Tama may mean:

Maidan is an originally Persian میدان word for a town square or public gathering place, adopted by various other languages: Urdu میدان (maidān); Arabic مَيْدَان (maydān); Turkish meydan; Bangla ময়দান, meaning field, and Crimean Tatar, from which Ukrainian also borrowed maidan. Its ultimate source is Proto-Indo-European *médʰyos - compare Avestan maiδya, Sanskrit मध्य and Latin medius. Various versions include maydan, midan, meydan, majdan, mayadeen and maydān. It also means field (मैदान) in Hindi. It became a loanword in other South Asian languages to give similar means, such as in Tamil in which the word is maidhanam.

Tabor may refer to:

Saki (1870–1916) was the pen name of Edwardian satirist H. H. Munro.

Kalina may refer to:

Radwan may refer to:

Gola may refer to:

Laki is a volcanic fissure in the south of Iceland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Woiwurrung–Taungurung language</span> Pama–Nyungan language spoken in Australia

Woiwurrung and Taungurung are Aboriginal languages of the Kulin nation of Central Victoria. Woiwurrung was spoken by the Woiwurrung and related peoples in the Yarra River basin, and Taungurung by the Taungurung people north of the Great Dividing Range in the Goulburn River Valley around Mansfield, Benalla and Heathcote. They are often portrayed as distinct languages, but they were mutually intelligible. Ngurai-illamwurrung (Ngurraiillam) may have been a clan name, a dialect, or a closely related language.

Gaj or GAJ may refer to:

Bara may refer to:

Raj or RAJ may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kulin languages</span> Pama–Nyungan language group of Australia

The Kulin languages are a group of closely related languages of the Kulin people, part of the Kulinic branch of Pama–Nyungan.

Kanta may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Djadjawurrung language</span> Kulin language spoken in Australia

Djadjawurrung is an Aboriginal Australian language spoken by the Dja Dja Wurrung people of the Kulin nation of central Victoria. Djadjawurrung was spoken by 16 clans around Murchison, the central highlands region, east to Woodend, west to the Pyrenees, north to Boort and south to the Great Dividing Range.

Duki may refer to: