- ورزش varziś व् vat w पकवान پكوان pakvān व् well x ख़राब خراب k͟harāb ख़्
Scottish loch z काग़ज़ کاغذ kāġaz ज़् zoo ʒ अझ़दहा اژدہا
aždahā झ़् pleasure...
-
mythological figure Aždahak,
Modern Persian 'aždehâ/
aždahâ', (اژدها)
Tajik Persian 'aždaho', (аждаҳо) Urdu '
aždahā' (اژدہا), as well as the
Kurdish ejdîha (ئەژدیها)...
- Esfandiar,
Bahram V (Gur) are
among the
heroes that kill an azhdaha. "
AŽDAHĀ". ENCYCLOPÆDIA IRANICA.
Retrieved 10 July 2016.
Kajani Hesari, Hojjat. "Mythical...
-
Medieval East
Christian and
Islamic Art. Brill. pp. 29. ISBN 9789004209725. "
AŽDAHĀ".
Encyclopaedia Iranica.
Retrieved 2019-09-04. Buckley,
Jorunn Jacobsen...
-
Phoneme present in
loanwords only. See
Modern Hebrew phonology Hindi अझ़दहा/
aždahá [əʒd̪əhaː] 'dragon' Only
occurs in loanwrods. See Hindi–Urdu phonology....
- ja ज़, za z अङ्ग्रेज़ी, aṅgrēzī, 'English' झ, jha झ़, ža, zha ʒ अझ़दहा,
aždahā, 'dragon' ड, ḍa ड़, ṛa ɽ बड़ा, baṛā, 'big' ढ, ḍha ढ़, ṛha ɽʰ पढ़ना, paṛhnā...
- "Az", Old
Armenian mythological figure Aždahak,
Modern Persian 'aždehâ/
aždahâ',
Tajik Persian 'azhdahâ', Urdu 'azhdahā' (اژدها), as well as the Kurdish...
-
arched panels below Jahangir's
Khwabgah (the
Imperial Bedchamber) are
azdahas or
winged dragons from
ancient Persian mythology, cup-bearing
angel figures...
- 𐫀𐫋𐫅𐫍𐫀𐫃, romanized: ažδahāg (borrowing) Persian: اژدها, romanized:
aždahā (probably) Hittite:
Illuyanka As for
other related Indo-European myths,...
-
Bosnian and
Serbian as aždaja (аждаја). The word aždaja or
aždaha is
borrowed from
Persian azdahā (اژدها), and has its
origins in the Indo-Iranian mythology...