Kale (disambiguation)

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Kale is a species of cabbage in which the central leaves do not form a head.

Contents

Kale may also refer to:

Ethnography

Places

Former Ottoman Empire

Kale means 'fortified place' in Turkish.

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Crimea

Macedonia

Romania

  • Ada Kaleh (lit. 'Fortress Island' in Turkish), former Danube island

Serbia

Turkey

India

Iran

Myanmar

Slovenia

Nepal

United States

People

Other uses

See also

Related Research Articles

Mark may refer to:

Turk or Turks may refer to:

Tara may refer to:

Baba and similar words may refer to:

Kai or KAI may refer to:


Io most commonly refers to:

Pan or PAN may refer to:

Diana most commonly refers to:

Musa may refer to:

Bongo may refer to:

Kalo or KALO may refer to:

Hissar means fort or castle in Arabic, with variants adopted into Persian and Turkish (hisar).

Welsh Romani is a variety of the Romani language which was spoken fluently in Wales until at least 1950. It was spoken by the Kale group of the Romani people who arrived in Britain during the 16th century. The first record of Romani moving permanently into Wales comes from the 18th century. Welsh-Romani is one of the many Northern Romani dialects.

Manda may refer to:

The Finnish Kale are a group of the Romani people who live primarily in Finland and Sweden. Their main languages are Finnish, Swedish and Finnish Romani. Kalo/Kale is the collective name for traveler people in Finland, England and Spain.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Romani diaspora</span> Dispersion of the Roma people

The Romani people have several distinct populations, the largest being the Roma and the Calé, who reached Anatolia and the Balkans in the early 12th century, from a migration out of the Indian subcontinent beginning about 1st century – 2nd century AD. They settled in the areas of present-day Turkey, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Croatia, Moldova, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, Hungary, Albania, Kosovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czech Republic, Slovenia and Slovakia, by order of volume, and Spain. From the Balkans, they migrated throughout Europe and, in the nineteenth and later centuries, to the Americas. The Roma population in the United States is estimated at more than one million.

Scottish Travellers, or the people in Scotland loosely termed Romani persons or travellers, consist of a number of diverse, unrelated communities that speak a variety of different languages and dialects that pertain to distinct customs, histories, and traditions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Qalat (fortress)</span> Type of castle

Qalat or kalata (قلعه) in Persian, and qal'a(-t) or qil'a(-t) in Arabic, means 'fortress', 'fortification', 'castle', or simply 'fortified place'. The common English plural is "qalats".

Kale, sometimes spelt as Kayle or abbreviated from Kalen, is a Gaelic unisex given name, although it is more commonly given to males.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Caulifla and Kale</span> Female Saiyans from the Dragon Ball franchise

Caulifla and Kale are two interconnected fictional characters from the Dragon Ball media franchise. Created as part of a collaborative effort between franchise creator Akira Toriyama and Toei Animation, the characters first appeared in the Universal Saga arc of Dragon Ball Super as antagonistic characters from an alternate universe to the setting of the Dragon Ball series: Kale was originally conceived as a derivative character of popular Dragon Ball villain Broly by Toei Animation staff, and Caulifla was personally designed by Toriyama as a companion and counterpoint to Kale.