Osmanid

English

Etymology

From Osman +‎ -id.

Adjective

Osmanid (not comparable)

  1. Synonym of Ottoman.
    • 1967, Journal of Ancient Indian History[1], page 177:
      [] the Osmanid Turks.
    • 1995, World Geographical Encyclopedia[2], page 59:
      [] the Osmanid or Ottoman dynasty []
    • 1996, Power, Conscience and Opposition[3], page 6:
      [] the Osmanid Imperial state []

Translations

Noun

Osmanid (plural Osmanids)

  1. Synonym of Ottoman.
    • 1982, Abdul Ghafur Chaudhri, Some Aspects of Islamic Education[4], page 23:
      Some of the teachers under the Osmanids had amassed enormous wealth []
    • 2006, Orthodoxy and the West: Hellenic Self-identity in the Modern Age[5], page 121:
      Thus the period of Turkish occupation was the “dynasty of the Osmanids.”
    • 2021, Global Perspectives in Modern Italian Culture, page 63:
      [] if someday the dynasty of the Osmanids would come to its end.

Translations