| 释义 | 
		Definition of Abbasid in English: Abbasidadjective ˈabəsɪdəˈbasɪdəˈbasid Relating to a dynasty of caliphs who ruled in Baghdad from 750 to 1258.  Example sentencesExamples -  Baghdad lies near the site of Babylon and was founded by the Arab Abbasid dynasty in the eighth century AD.
 -  Nor was the political dynamism of the Abbasid empire's smaller successor states by any means exhausted.
 -  In Baghdad the Abbasid dynasty is established.
 -  This also brought the Ayyubids closer to the Abbasid caliphs in Baghdad.
 -  This period begins under the Caliph Harun al-Rashid, the fifth Caliph of the Abbasid dynasty, whose reign began in 786.
 -  During the Abbasid period, when Islam's foundations were developed, leading scholars and thinkers were exclusively male.
 -  He also elaborated on the large number of legal verdicts and judgements pronounced during the Abbasid period.
 -  Their value as gifts was established as early as 802 when the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid sent an elephant to Charlemagne.
 -  In 762 AD the new rulers, called the Abbasid caliphs, founded a new capital city on the river Tigris.
 -  The revolution that brought the Abbasid family to power prompted a period of medieval prosperity for Iraq.
 -  Harun al-Rashid became the fifth Caliph of the Abbasid dynasty on 14 September 786.
 -  The Abbasid caliphs decided to adopt a more deliberate approach to the cultural and intellectual growth of the empire.
 -  The Abbasid dynasty, centered in Iraq, followed.
 -  Al-Musta'sim, the last Abbasid caliph in Baghdad, proved no match for Hulegu's Mongol forces when they attacked Baghdad.
 -  When al-Musta'sim, the Abbasid caliph, opposed her reign, the sultana abdicated and married Aybek.
 -  Under the Abbasid caliphs who made it their capital in AD 762, it was a walled centre of culture and learning.
 -  Najaf's founding as a city dates back to 791, when the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid supposedly passed through during a hunt.
 -  In the 8th and 9th centuries, under the Abbasid caliphs, Islamic civilization entered a golden age.
 -  During the latter Abbasid and Ottoman periods, the itjihad was suppressed.
 -  In 1055 they entered Baghdad on the invitation of the Abbasid caliph.
 
 
 noun ˈabəsɪdəˈbasɪdəˈbasid A member of the Abbasid dynasty.  Example sentencesExamples -  In the same century as when the Abbasids were overthrown, the Muslim kingdoms in Spain were being destroyed one after another.
 -  There were bowls of a tasty variety of crisps and bottles of coke and lemonade, and a jug of orange squash.
 -  In 750 the Umayyad caliphate in Damascus was overthrown by the Abbasids.
 -  They repositioned themselves in the courts and cities of the Abbasids by distancing themselves from Islam.
 -  He poured me an orange squash.
 -  Then power struggle ensued between the Umayyads and Abbasids.
 -  It wasn't champagne and wine to celebrate, but orange squash and coffee, as the pair are both strictly teetotal.
 -  The Shiite Muslims subsequently established the Abbasid as the caliph.
 -  The Abbasids set themselves up at Baghdad, but rivals arose elsewhere and Islam fragmented politically.
 -  Two principal dynasties, the Umayyads and Abbasids, dominated the caliphate until 1258.
 -  I would whip up huge batches of sickly-sweet chocolate crispies and flog them along with weak orange squash in paper cups for 15p each.
 -  They have come and gone in the city's history, Abbasids and Ummayads and Mongols and Turks and British and now the Americans.
 -  Early Umayyad caliphs and some of the Abbasids who supplanted them employed the title khalifat Allah.
 -  Under the Abbasids, the Islamic empire enjoyed a brilliant golden age in arts and sciences.
 -  Children are well catered for with meals like fish fingers, chips and beans, with free orange squash and ice cream.
 -  In the days of Umayyads, their capital was Damascus and in the days of Abbasids, their permanent seat was in Baghdad.
 -  In the 1970s we ate pork pies, corned beef, cake, biscuits, all washed down with diluted orange squash.
 -  I just went down to take him a glass of orange squash.
 -  This is the sort of home-baked delight that a much-loved grandmother might have given you alongside a glass of orange squash or a mug of instant coffee.
 -  Under the Abbasids, Baghdad became the capital and the center of political power and culture in the Middle East.
 -  Sitting on the veranda in the hot sun, the two drank orange squash and cosily chatted.
 -  The Damascus-based Umayyads were overthrown by a revolution that brought the new dynasty of the Abbasids to power.
 -  They soon succeeded in taking over not only Egypt but much of North Africa from the Abbasids.
 -  Its political unity had been disrupted soon after the victory of the Abbasids.
 -  It was a systematic effort, initiated by the Umayyids, but specially developed under the Abbasids, who built Baghdad.
 -  Less than half the land which had been cultivated in that province under the Abbasids could still be farmed in 1300.
 -  Although the Islamic Empire was reconstructed, the scientific temper of the Abbasids could never be restored to the Arabs.
 -  The corrupt Umayyad kingdom was overthrown by the Abbasids around 750 CE.
 -  He wrestles into position on a rickety picnic bench and glugs from a pint glass of orange squash.
 -  The youngsters tucked into complimentary homemade scones, fruitcake, and orange squash.
 
 
 Origin   Named after al-Abbas (566–652), the prophet Muhammad's uncle: the dynasty was founded by his descendants. Rhymes   acid, antacid, flaccid, Hasid, placid    Definition of Abbasid in US English: Abbasidadjectiveəˈbasid Relating to a dynasty of caliphs who ruled in Baghdad from 750 to 1258.  Example sentencesExamples -  This also brought the Ayyubids closer to the Abbasid caliphs in Baghdad.
 -  In 1055 they entered Baghdad on the invitation of the Abbasid caliph.
 -  Baghdad lies near the site of Babylon and was founded by the Arab Abbasid dynasty in the eighth century AD.
 -  Najaf's founding as a city dates back to 791, when the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid supposedly passed through during a hunt.
 -  Their value as gifts was established as early as 802 when the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid sent an elephant to Charlemagne.
 -  During the latter Abbasid and Ottoman periods, the itjihad was suppressed.
 -  In 762 AD the new rulers, called the Abbasid caliphs, founded a new capital city on the river Tigris.
 -  When al-Musta'sim, the Abbasid caliph, opposed her reign, the sultana abdicated and married Aybek.
 -  During the Abbasid period, when Islam's foundations were developed, leading scholars and thinkers were exclusively male.
 -  The Abbasid caliphs decided to adopt a more deliberate approach to the cultural and intellectual growth of the empire.
 -  Under the Abbasid caliphs who made it their capital in AD 762, it was a walled centre of culture and learning.
 -  In Baghdad the Abbasid dynasty is established.
 -  In the 8th and 9th centuries, under the Abbasid caliphs, Islamic civilization entered a golden age.
 -  The revolution that brought the Abbasid family to power prompted a period of medieval prosperity for Iraq.
 -  He also elaborated on the large number of legal verdicts and judgements pronounced during the Abbasid period.
 -  Harun al-Rashid became the fifth Caliph of the Abbasid dynasty on 14 September 786.
 -  This period begins under the Caliph Harun al-Rashid, the fifth Caliph of the Abbasid dynasty, whose reign began in 786.
 -  Nor was the political dynamism of the Abbasid empire's smaller successor states by any means exhausted.
 -  The Abbasid dynasty, centered in Iraq, followed.
 -  Al-Musta'sim, the last Abbasid caliph in Baghdad, proved no match for Hulegu's Mongol forces when they attacked Baghdad.
 
 
 nounəˈbasid A member of the Abbasid dynasty.  Example sentencesExamples -  It wasn't champagne and wine to celebrate, but orange squash and coffee, as the pair are both strictly teetotal.
 -  Although the Islamic Empire was reconstructed, the scientific temper of the Abbasids could never be restored to the Arabs.
 -  Then power struggle ensued between the Umayyads and Abbasids.
 -  In the days of Umayyads, their capital was Damascus and in the days of Abbasids, their permanent seat was in Baghdad.
 -  Under the Abbasids, the Islamic empire enjoyed a brilliant golden age in arts and sciences.
 -  This is the sort of home-baked delight that a much-loved grandmother might have given you alongside a glass of orange squash or a mug of instant coffee.
 -  It was a systematic effort, initiated by the Umayyids, but specially developed under the Abbasids, who built Baghdad.
 -  Two principal dynasties, the Umayyads and Abbasids, dominated the caliphate until 1258.
 -  Less than half the land which had been cultivated in that province under the Abbasids could still be farmed in 1300.
 -  The Shiite Muslims subsequently established the Abbasid as the caliph.
 -  In 750 the Umayyad caliphate in Damascus was overthrown by the Abbasids.
 -  They soon succeeded in taking over not only Egypt but much of North Africa from the Abbasids.
 -  They repositioned themselves in the courts and cities of the Abbasids by distancing themselves from Islam.
 -  In the same century as when the Abbasids were overthrown, the Muslim kingdoms in Spain were being destroyed one after another.
 -  Children are well catered for with meals like fish fingers, chips and beans, with free orange squash and ice cream.
 -  Sitting on the veranda in the hot sun, the two drank orange squash and cosily chatted.
 -  Its political unity had been disrupted soon after the victory of the Abbasids.
 -  The Damascus-based Umayyads were overthrown by a revolution that brought the new dynasty of the Abbasids to power.
 -  They have come and gone in the city's history, Abbasids and Ummayads and Mongols and Turks and British and now the Americans.
 -  I would whip up huge batches of sickly-sweet chocolate crispies and flog them along with weak orange squash in paper cups for 15p each.
 -  He wrestles into position on a rickety picnic bench and glugs from a pint glass of orange squash.
 -  The youngsters tucked into complimentary homemade scones, fruitcake, and orange squash.
 -  Under the Abbasids, Baghdad became the capital and the center of political power and culture in the Middle East.
 -  He poured me an orange squash.
 -  I just went down to take him a glass of orange squash.
 -  There were bowls of a tasty variety of crisps and bottles of coke and lemonade, and a jug of orange squash.
 -  The corrupt Umayyad kingdom was overthrown by the Abbasids around 750 CE.
 -  Early Umayyad caliphs and some of the Abbasids who supplanted them employed the title khalifat Allah.
 -  In the 1970s we ate pork pies, corned beef, cake, biscuits, all washed down with diluted orange squash.
 -  The Abbasids set themselves up at Baghdad, but rivals arose elsewhere and Islam fragmented politically.
 
 
 Origin   Named after al-Abbas (566–652), the prophet Muhammad's uncle: the dynasty was founded by his descendants.     |