tatar in English

adjective
1
relating to the Tatars or their language.
The missionaries, usually from rich Arab states such as Saudi Arabia, sport ragged full beards, and their women are veiled and covered from head to toe - in contrast to the western look of most Crimean Tatar men and women.
noun
1
a member of a Turkic people living in Tatarstan and various other parts of Russia and Ukraine. They are the descendants of the Tartars who ruled central Asia in the 14th century.
In 1944, on the pretext that they had collaborated with the Germans, Stalin ordered the deportation within a few days of the remaining 200,000 Crimean Tatars to Central Asia.
2
the Turkic language of the Tatars.
So if Russian patriots are shouting in Tatar and using a French word to describe themselves, I guess jingoism is just fine.
noun

Use "tatar" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "tatar" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "tatar", or refer to the context using the word "tatar" in the English Dictionary.

1. RINAT (1) Ринат m Tatar, Bashkir, Kazakh Tatar, Bashkir and Kazakh form of RENAT.

2. AIRAT Айрат m Tatar, Bashkir

3. Blacklead translation in English-Tatar dictionary

4. AIGOL Айгөл f Tatar, Bashkir From Tatar and Bashkir ай (ay) meaning "moon" combined with гөл (göl) "flower"

5. These results would not have been possible without Tatar literature.

6. The Jin and Tatar armies defeated the Mongols in 1161.

7. RFE/RL's Tatar-Bashkir Service is the only major international news provider reporting in the Tatar and Bashkir languages to audiences in the Russian Federation’s multiethnic, Muslim-majority

8. Arabic, Persian, Urdu, Bashkir and Tatar form of Miryam (see MARY)

9. In 1675, Sobieski defeated a Turkish and Tatar offensive aiming at Lviv.

10. Their unique units are the Janissary, the Spakh, the Tatar and the Turkish yacht.

11. Several of them were also money lenders who financed Astrakhan Tatar and Armenian trade

12. The ethnic history of the Crimean Tatar people over the millennia was formed in Crimea.

13. Mikhail, an antique shop keeper, stumbles upon a rare Chippendale's drawer in a Tatar by-place

14. There, Sobieski learned the Tatar language and the Turkish language and studied Turkish military traditions and tactics.

15. The Tatar invasion in the 13th century quickly proved it is difficult to defend a plain.

16. Greeks, Romans, Goths, Tatar-Mongols, Ottomans, Russians, Brits and Frenchmen during the Crimean war,… Read more stories

17. Susana Jamaladinova was born in Osh, Kirghiz SSR, to a Crimean Tatar father and an Armenian mother.

18. Argali, the Tatar name of the great wild sheep, Ovis ammon, of the Altai and other parts of Siberia

19. People hold Crimean Tatar flags at a rally near the parliament building in Simferopol on February 26, 2014

20. Crimea (Russian: Крым, Ukrainian: Крим, Crimean Tatar: Qırım, Къырым) is a peninsula jutting into the Black Sea south of Ukraine.

21. The current Latin-based Crimean Tatar alphabet is the same as the Turkish alphabet, with two additional characters: Ñ ñ and Q q.

22. Crimean Tatars (Crimean Tatar: qırımtatarlar, къырымтатарлар) or Crimeans (Crimean Tatar: qırımlar, къырымлар), are an East European Turkic ethnic group and nation, who are an indigenous people of Crimea.The formation and ethnogenesis of Crimean Tatars occurred during the 13th–17th centuries, from Cumans that appeared in Crimea in the 10th century, with strong

23. In the 16th century, to protect the borderland area from Tatar invasions, Cossacks carried out sentry and patrol duties, guarding from Crimean Tatars and nomads of the Nogai Horde in the steppe region.

24. Most Bashkirs speak the Bashkir language, closely related to Tatar and Kazakh languages which belongs to the Kipchak branch of the Turkic languages and share cultural affinities with the broader Turkic peoples.

25. They were enrolled in the seventeenth company of the fourth regiment of the Bordered Yellow Banner and given space in the northeast corner of the Tatar City of Peking (at a different place from the O-lo-ssu Kuan).

26. You will have been caviled, Cavilled: he/she/it will have been caviled, Cavilled: they will have been caviled, Cavilled: Translate cavil to: Spanish German French Portuguese Italian Chinese Danish Greek Finnish Hungarian Dutch Norwegian Polish Turkish Ukrainian Kazakh Tatar Latin

27. Azerbaijani belongs to the Oghuz branch of Turkic languages, so by speaking the language you’ll already be well on your way toward understanding and reading Turkish, Tatar (Crimea) and Turkmen, the language of Turkmens living in Turkmenistan, northeastern Iran and …

28. About Academician Roald Zinnurovich Sagdeev Wikipedia Roald Zinnurovich Sagdeev (Russian: Роальд Зиннурович Сагдеев, Tatar: Роальд Зиннур улы Сәгъдиев born 26 December 1932) is a Soviet and Russian expert in plasma physics and a former director of the Space Research Institute of the USSR Academy of

29. In easy hours, their talk ran from the Tatar Wall beyond Peking to the Southern Islands, down under Manila; from Portsmouth Navy Yard - New Hampshire and very cold - to obscure Bushwhackings in the West Indies, where Cacao Chiefs, whimsically sanguinary barefoot generals with names like Charlemagne and Christophe, waged war according to the

30. The Cyrillic alphabet is an alphabet used to write six Slavic languages (Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Serbian, Macedonian, and Bulgarian), as well as other languages of Russia and the former Soviet Union, such as Tatar, Chuvash, Azeri (1940-1991), Turkmen (1940-1994), Uzbek (1940-1998), Kyrgyz, Kazakh (all Turkic languages), Tajik (an Indo

31. Ghiyas Beg was a native of Tehran, and was the youngest son of Khvajeh Mohammad-Sharif, a poet and vizier of Mohammad Khan Tekkelu and his son Tatar Soltan, who was the governor of the Safavid province of Khorasan.Mohammad-Sharif was later listed under the service of Shah Tahmasp I (r

32. "Bey" (Ottoman Turkish: بك ‎ “Beik”, Chagatay: بك “Bek”, Turkmen: Beg, Uzbek: bek, Kazakh: бек, Tatar: bäk, Albanian: beu, Bosnian: Beg, Persian: بیگ ‎ “Beigh” or بگ “Beg”, Tajik: бе, Arabic: بيه ‎ “Beyeh”) is a Turkic title for a chieftain, and an honorific, traditionally applied to people with special lineages to the leaders or rulers of variously

33. Bolas, throwing weapon made of weights on the ends of an interconnected cord; Bola (volcano), a volcano on the island of New Britain in Papua New Guinea Bola, Togo; Bola Bola, a gambling game similar to Three-card Monte; Bola, a 2010 Facebook game developed by Playdom; The Battle of Los Angeles, by Rage Against the Machine; Tatar spelling of Bula River