Examples of using Mongols in English and their translations into Malay
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Lovely stretch of track, the Mongols.
All Mongols are afraid of it.
I know what to do with Mongols.
All Mongols fear the thunder… but not you?
You will see. Lovely stretch of track, the Mongols.
Even Mongols couldn't beat Ahis.
Lovely stretch of track, the Mongols. You will see.
Mongols don't make war over a woman.
There are only two strong Mongols in the steppe.
The Mongols divided the people in China into four classes.
But you did not like the Mongols destroyed the homes of their head.
Mongols need laws that will unite them in a tight knot.
The divisions of M into C andD occurred in the Eastern steppes among the Han and the Mongols and the Japanese.
And the Mongols agreed to my laws, but Jamuha did not.
From there the group spreads north and east to the Mongols and Han Chinese and on to Japan and Taiwan.
The Mongols attempted to breach the city's walls, and, by February 5, had seized a significant portion of the defenses.
Borneo has a less than 5% D group also, as do the Uygurs,Altai, the Mongols, the Kyrgyz, Uzbeks and the Siberian Eskimo.
The area was conquerd by the Mongols in the 13th century and eventually became the autonomous Siberian Khanate.
There is a theory that they had migrated from Tartar.[8]The term'Tartar' seems to have been a general term for all northern peoples, Mongols, Manchurians, and so on.
The Mongols tore down the castles at Alamut and other places so that the Assassins could not take refuge and regroup there.
After the defeat of the Bulgarian army by the Mongols, the nobles ran away on their estates, hoping that they would not be touched there;
The Mongols rolled the caliph up in a rug, and rode their horses over him, as they believed that the earth was offended if touched by royal blood.
The Battle of Köse Dağ was fought between the Sultanate of Rum ruled by the Seljuq dynasty and the Mongol Empire on June 26, 1243 at the defile of Köse Dağ, a location between Erzincan and Gümüşhane in modern northeastern Turkey.[10][11] The Mongols achieved a decisive victory.
The next year the Mongols went north and looted the Jin"eastern capital", and in 1213 they besieged the"central capital".
In Empire of The Steppes, René Grousset reports that the Mongols were always amazed at the valor of the Jin warriors, who held out until seven years after the death of Genghis Khan.
Nestorians began converting Mongols around the 7th century, and Nestorian Christianity was probably introduced into China during the Tang Dynasty(618-907).
Defence against the Mongols: In the northern frontier regions, a Ming general rebelled and allied with the Mongols to attack the Ming Empire.