English
- Dzunghar, Dzhungar, Dzhunghar, Zungar, Zunghar, Zhungar, Zhunghar, Dsungar, Djungar
Noun
Dzungar (plural Dzungars or Dzungar)
- A member of a western Mongol people that were one of the four major tribes that made up the Oirats.
1960, Edwin O. Reischauer, John K. Fairbank, East Asia: The Great Tradition[1], Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, page 359:The Western Mongols, and especially the Dzungars, though defeated in their eastward expansion, continued to be a source of disorder in the far northwest.
Derived terms
Translations
person
- Chagatai: جونغار (jūnğār)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 準噶爾人 / 准噶尔人 (Zhǔngá'ěrrén)
- Kalmyk: зүн һар (zün ğar)
- Kazakh:
- Arabic: جوڭعار (jongĝar)
- Cyrillic: жоңғар (joñğar)
- Latin: jońǵar
- Manchu: ᠵᡠᠨ
ᡤᠠᡵ (jun gar)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: зүүнгар (züüngar)
- Mongolian: ᠵᠡᠭᠦᠨ
ᠭᠠᠷ (ǰegün ɣar)
- Spanish: zúngaro m
- Uyghur:
- Arabic: جۇڭغار (jungghar)
- Cyrillic: җуңғар (jungghar)
- Uzbek:
- Cyrillic: жунғор (jungʻor)
- Latin: jungʻor
- Written Oirat: ᠴᡈᡉᠨ
ᡎᠠᠷ (zöün ɣar)
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Adjective
Dzungar (comparative more Dzungar, superlative most Dzungar)
- Of or pertaining to the Dzungar people.
1971, O. Edmund Clubb, China and Russia: The "Great Game"[2], Columbia University Press, →ISBN, page 39:Peking, seeking allies in its conflict with the Dzungar khanate, thought of engaging the Torguts living in refuge on the Volga under the leadership of Ayuka Khan.
Further reading