Hindoo - определение. Что такое Hindoo
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Что (кто) такое Hindoo - определение

ADHERENT OF THE RELIGION OF HINDUISM
Hindu (ethnicity); Hindu people; Hindoos; Hinduists; Hindhu; Hindoo; Hindu; Hindu peoples
  • A Hindu wedding ritual in [[India]]
  • A young [[Nepal]]i Hindu devotee during a traditional prayer ceremony at [[Kathmandu]]'s [[Durbar Square]].
  • [[Hinduism]] by country, worldmap (estimate 2010).<ref name=prcwdc>Pew Research Center, Washington DC, [http://www.pewforum.org/files/2012/12/globalReligion-tables.pdf Religious Composition by Country (December 2012)] (2012)</ref>
  • Hindus at [[Har Ki Pauri]], [[Haridwar]] near river [[Ganges]] in [[Uttarakhand]] state of India.

Hindoo         
·noun ·Alt. of Hindu.
II. Hindoo ·add. ·- ·Alt. of Hindu, calendar.
Hindoos         
·pl of Hindu.
Hindoo (horse)         
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HORSE
Hindoo (1878–1901) was an outstanding American Thoroughbred race horse who won 30 of his 35 starts, including the Kentucky Derby, the Travers Stakes, and the Clark Handicap. He later sired Preakness Stakes winner Buddhist and Belmont Stakes winner and Leading sire in North America Hanover.

Википедия

Hindus

Hindus (Hindustani: [ˈɦɪndu] (listen); ) are people who religiously adhere to Hinduism. Historically, the term has also been used as a geographical, cultural, and later religious identifier for people living in the Indian subcontinent.

The term "Hindu" traces back to Old Persian which derived these names from the Sanskrit name Sindhu (सिन्धु ), referring to the river Indus. The Greek cognates of the same terms are "Indus" (for the river) and "India" (for the land of the river). The term "Hindu" also implied a geographic, ethnic or cultural identifier for people living in the Indian subcontinent around or beyond the Sindhu (Indus) River. By the 16th century CE, the term began to refer to residents of the subcontinent who were not Turkic or Muslims. Hindoo is an archaic spelling variant, whose use today is considered derogatory.

The historical development of Hindu self-identity within the local Indian population, in a religious or cultural sense, is unclear. Competing theories state that Hindu identity developed in the British colonial era, or that it may have developed post-8th century CE after the Muslim invasions and medieval Hindu–Muslim wars. A sense of Hindu identity and the term Hindu appears in some texts dated between the 13th and 18th century in Sanskrit and Bengali. The 14th- and 18th-century Indian poets such as Vidyapati, Kabir, Tulsidas and Eknath used the phrase Hindu dharma (Hinduism) and contrasted it with Turaka dharma (Islam). The Christian friar Sebastiao Manrique used the term 'Hindu' in a religious context in 1649. In the 18th century, European merchants and colonists began to refer to the followers of Indian religions collectively as Hindus, in contrast to Mohamedans for groups such as Turks, Mughals and Arabs, who were adherents of Islam. By the mid-19th century, colonial orientalist texts further distinguished Hindus from Buddhists, Sikhs and Jains, but the colonial laws continued to consider all of them to be within the scope of the term Hindu until about mid-20th century. Scholars state that the custom of distinguishing between Hindus, Buddhists, Jains and Sikhs is a modern phenomenon.

At more than 1.2 billion, Hindus are the world's third-largest religious group after Christians and Muslims. The vast majority of Hindus, approximately 966 million (94.3% of the global Hindu population), live in India, according to the 2011 Indian census. After India, the next nine countries with the largest Hindu populations are, in decreasing order: Nepal, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, the United States, Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates and the United Kingdom. These together accounted for 99% of the world's Hindu population, and the remaining nations of the world combined had about 6 million Hindus as of 2010.

Примеры употребления для Hindoo
1. Holyoake‘s religious peculiarities have as good a right to be treated with respect as those of a Quaker, a Jew, a Hindoo, or any other witness who may come before a court of law.
2. Article continues By the time Oswald finally returned to Britain, he had become, according to one contemporary, "a convert so much to the Hindu faith, that the ferocity of the young soldier of fortune sunk into the mild philosophic manners of the Hindoo Brahmin". Oswald‘s next career move was to join the French Revolution with a proclamation that the republican fraternité should be extended to the animal kingdom, before grape–shot laid him and his utopian dreams to rest.