10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «TEBBAD»
Discover the use of
tebbad in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
tebbad and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Arabia, tebbad of Turkestan, sirocco of the Sahara, mistral of France, Santa Ana
of Southern California, and chinook of the North American Rocky Mountains. To
the ancient Greeks, the wind was Zephyros, Boreas, Notos, and Eurus. To the ...
Michelle A. Gilders, 2000
2
Travels in central Asia: being the account of a journey from ...
193 obliged to make, during the day also, marches of from five to six hours'
duration, for the sooner we emerged from the region of sand, the less occasion
we had to dr<?ad the dangerous wind tebbad ;* for on the firm plain it can but
bring with ...
3
Travels in Central Asia
Notwithstanding the scorching heat, we were obliged to make, during the day
also, marches of from five to six hours' duration, for the sooner we emerged from
the region of sand, the less occasion we had to dread the dangerous wind
Tebbad ...
other desert, in passing which they were nearly shipwrecked, for besides horrible
sufferings from thirst, they were threatened by robbers, and overwhelmed by the
tebbad, a hot whirlwind, which fortunately overtook them only when they had ...
Henry Mills Alden, Thomas Bucklin Wells, Lee Foster Hartman, 1865
Of the camels, wearied by the speed of the retreat before the desert was plunged
into, two died, and still there must be all haste made, for if the Tebbad swept over
them while they were in the deep roll of the sands, the whole caravan would be ...
6
The General Baptist repository, and Missionary observer ...
Bat the chief incident in their pissige OTer this dreary desert was from mother
source of peril — the tebbad, or hot wind, that brings the sand-storm. Fortuatcly it
did not come till they had inched the margin of the sand. " The Kerranbashi and
his ...
7
Harper's New Monthly Magazine
Tebbad is a Persian word, signifying fever-wind. It is most to be dreaded in the
sandy deserts, where it may not only bring the torture of fever, but overwhelm
every thing under dense volumes of sand. Less destructive in their effects, but
hardly ...
These are known as the tebbad or tibbad and the gharm-sol. The tebbad is a hot
wind and sand storm which is feared, because it is also associated with illness,
hence its name (Persian: tebbad "fever wind"). Like the buran, it can blow up very
...
9
Ural-Altaische Jahrbücher
These are known as the tebbad or tibbad and the gharm-sol. The tebbad is a hot
wind and sand storm which is feared, because it is also associated with illness,
hence its name (Persian: tebbad "fever wind"). Like the buran, it can blow up very
...
Decsy Gyula, A. J. Bodrogligeti, 1991
10
New Zealand Slavonic Journal
Notwithstanding the scorching heat, we were obliged to make, during the day
also, marches of from five to six hours' duration, for the sooner we emerged from
the region of sand, the less occasion we had to dread the dangerous wind
Tebbad, ...