Definition
A traditional horseman or mounted soldier, particularly in Middle Eastern, North African, or Indian contexts; a cavalry soldier.
Etymology
From Arabic 'amir' (commander) or Urdu/Persian origins relating to cavalry. The term spread through colonial and trade contacts, appearing in English texts about Eastern military traditions.
Kelly Says
Medieval amhars were the elite cavalry of their regions—fast, skilled, and deadly on horseback—and for centuries they were the dominant military force before gunpowder and artillery made cavalry charges suicidally obsolete.
Translations
CACatalà
amhara
ah-mah-rah
CSČeština
Amhara
ah-mah-rah
DADansk
amhara
ah-mah-rah
DEDeutsch
Amhara
ah-mah-rah
ELΕλληνικά
Αμχάρα
ah-mah-rah
ESEspañol
amhara
ah-mah-rah
FISuomi
amhara
ah-mah-rah
FRFrançais
amhara
ah-mah-rah
HIहिन्दी
अमहारा
ah-mah-ra
HUMagyar
amhara
ah-mah-rah
IDBahasa Indonesia
amhara
ah-mah-rah
ITItaliano
amhara
ah-mah-rah
MSBahasa Melayu
amhara
ah-mah-rah
MYမြန်မာ
အမဟာရ
ah-mah-ha-ra
NLNederlands
Amhara
ah-mah-rah
NONorsk
amhara
ah-mah-rah
PLPolski
amhara
ah-mah-rah
PTPortuguês
amhara
ah-mah-rah
RORomână
amhara
ah-mah-rah
SVSvenska
amhara
ah-mah-rah
SWKiswahili
amhara
ah-mah-rah
TEతెలుగు
అమహారా
ah-mah-ra
TRTürkçe
amhara
ah-mah-rah
UKУкраїнська
амхара
amkhara
VITiếng Việt
Amhara
am-ha-ra