(historical) An arbitrator who assessed and collected revenue in the pargana.
anim
iman
iman
noun
(Islam, countable) A believer in the Islamic faith.
(Islam, uncountable) Pious adherence to the Islamic faith.
Archaic form of imam.
main
main
adj
(archaic, of force, strength, etc.) Full, sheer, undivided.
(dialectal) Big; angry.
(nautical) Belonging to or connected with the principal mast in a vessel.
(obsolete) Great in size or degree; important, powerful, strong, vast.
Chief, most important, or principal in extent, size, or strength; consisting of the largest part.
Of chief or leading importance; prime, principal.
adv
(Britain, dialectal) Exceedingly, extremely, greatly, mightily, very, very much.
noun
(informal) Short for main course (“the principal dish of a meal”).
(nautical) Short for mainsail.
(now archaic, US dialectal) The mainland.
(now poetic) The high seas.
(obsolete, except in might and main) Force, power, strength, violent effort.
(obsolete, gaming) A hand or match in a game of dice.
(obsolete, gaming) A stake played for at dice.
(obsolete, gaming) The largest throw in a match at dice; in the game of hazard, a number from one to nine called out by a person before the dice are thrown.
(obsolete, gaming, sports) A sporting contest or match, especially a cockfighting match.
(obsolete, rare) A basket for gathering grapes.
(video games) The primary character that one plays in a video game in which one can play more than one character.
A banker's shovel for coins.
A large cable or pipe providing utility service to an area or a building, such as a water main or electric main.
That which is chief or principal; the chief or main portion; the bulk, the greater part, gross.
verb
(obsolete) To convert (a road) into a main or primary road.
(transitive, gaming) To mainly play a specific character or side, or with specific equipment, during a game.
(transitive, slang) Short for mainline (“to inject (a drug) directly into a vein”).
mani
mani
noun
(informal) Clipping of manicure.
mian
mina
mina
noun
(historical) A monetary unit of ancient Greece and the Middle East, originally equivalent to the weight of a mina of silver.
(historical) A unit of weight of varying value used in the ancient Middle East, especially Babylonia, Mesopotamia and Egypt; also an ancient Greek measure of weight equivalent to 1/60th of a talent.