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1India — • The peninsula is separated on the north from Tibet and Central Asia by the Himalaya, Hindu Kush, and Karakoram mountains, and some lower ranges divide it from Afghanistan and Baluchistan Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. India …
2INDIA — has played a significant role in Jewish culture and consciousness for 2000 years. Over the millennia, there have been commercial and cultural interactions and, in recent times, diplomatic, technological, and strategic links as well. Ancient Times …
3INDIA — regio Asiae amplissima, inter Indum fluv. Plin. l. 5. c. 28. et l. 6. c. 20. Strabo l. 1. p. 64. l. 2. p. 87. l. 15. p. 680. 690. et 697. Herod. l. 4. c. 44. ad Occ. a quo nomen habet, et Serum ad Ort. a Sinis separantem, inlongum extensa Oceano… …
4India — In di*a, n. [See {Indian}.] A country in Southern Asia; the two peninsulas of Hither and Farther India; in a restricted sense, Hither India, or Hindostan. [1913 Webster] {India ink}, a nearly black pigment brought chiefly from China, used for… …
5India — India recognized Israel on 18 September1950 but established full diplomatic relations only on 29 January 1992. Israel had opened a consulate in Bombay in the early 1950s, but its functions and jurisdiction were extremely limited. Ezer Weizman… …
6India — ist der Name folgender Personen: Sigismondo d India (1582–1629), süditalienischer Renaissancekomponist Linda Viera Caballero, Künstlername La India (* 1970), puerto ricanische Salsa Sängerin Shamika Brown, genannt India (* 1977), amerikanische… …
7India — En español, el nombre de este país de Asia se usa preferentemente precedido de artículo: «Un sismo demoledor sacudió ayer la India y Pakistán» (Siglo [Pan.] 27.1.01). Su uso sin artículo, que se da especialmente en textos periodísticos y que… …
8India — f. Abundancia de riquezas. U. m. en pl.) ☛ V. alcaparra de Indias, avellana de la India, bálsamo de copaiba de la India, Cámara de Indias, carrera de Indias, castaño de Indias, caña de Indias, caña de la India, cedro de la India, coco de Indias,… …
9India — Old English, from L. India, from Gk. India region of the Indus River, later used of the region beyond it, from Indos Indus River, from O.Pers. Hindu, the name for the province of Sind, from Skt. sindhu river. The more common M.E. form was Ynde or …
10India — f English: presumably from the name of the subcontinent, and apparently taken into regular use as a result of its occurence in Margaret Mitchell s novel Gone with the Wind (1936), which contributed a remarkable number of given names to the… …