释义 |
Ghuzz, n. and a. Brit. |guːz|, U.S. |guz| Plural unchanged Forms: 18 Gozz, 18 Guz, 18 Ghuz, 18 Guss, 18– Ghuzz [‹ Arabic ġuzz (also ġuz) > n.] A. n. = Oghuz n.
1845Encycl. Metrop. XXV. 868/2 They [sc. the Uzbeks] are called Ghuzz by the Arabs. 1888Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 660/2 The old name Ghuzz, originally, as it seems, the Turkish Oghuz (an eponymous hero of whom Turkish chronicles tell many fables) was wholly superseded by the new name Turkman. 1899F. H. Skrine & E. D. Ross Heart of Asia i. xix. 142 The Ghuz laid waste the whole of Khorāsān. 1947W. H. Auden Age of Anxiety (1948) v. 103 The Ghuzz, the Guptas, the gloomy Krimchaks. B. adj. = Oghuz n.
1866Chambers's Encycl. VIII. 607 The S[eljuks] of Kerman..were annihilated in 1191 by the Ghuz Turkomans. 1915Man 15 69 Merv..was seriously injured by the Ghuz hordes in 1153. 1951P. K. Hitti Hist. Arabs (ed. 5) xxxii. 478 The Saljūqs of al-Rūm in Iconium were superseded in 1300 and the following years by another branch of the Ghuzz tribe to which they belonged. 1997T. Mackintosh-Smith Yemen (1999) 260 Uthman, a fourteenth-century leader of the Ghuzz Turks in Asia Minor. |