Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Of, from, or pertaining to,
Sofia - noun Someone from
Sofia .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Sofian.
Examples
-
Authorities say a man named Sofian Abdelaziz (aka Sofian Zakout, aka Sofian Abdelaziz-Zakout, aka Sofian Zakkout) representing the American Muslim Association of North America, or AMANA, posted bond for the
unknown title 2009
-
I don't understand how he can do this, said Sofian Abidi, a Tunisian working in Libya who was leaving the country.
-
Another area Muslim leader, Sofian Zakkout of the American Muslim Association of North America, said that the imam was frail and nearly blind.
Members of Miami Mosque React to Arrests Arian Campo-Flores 2011
-
Grandmas pile bags into cars on the side of the highways, lone children hold out hand to stop strangers' cars to get to school - the only fear is whether or not the driver will be playing chalga -nauseatingly joyful, relentless, bouncing disco music 'truck driver music,' one Sofian hipster scoffed.
-
Grandmas pile bags into cars on the side of the highways, lone children hold out hand to stop strangers' cars to get to school - the only fear is whether or not the driver will be playing chalga -nauseatingly joyful, relentless, bouncing disco music 'truck driver music,' one Sofian hipster scoffed.
Archive 2008-04-06 2008
-
Abu Sofian sent for an army of the Koreish for his aid, and thus commenced the battle of Badr.
-
Abdullah-bin Oneis may have been sent as a spy to reconnoitre the movements of Sofián and his army, or to bring advices concerning him, but it cannot be affirmed that he was tutored by Mohammad to assassinate Sofian, even on the supposition that his mission was to kill the latter.
-
The speaker was an ordinary Sofian proletariat, earning his living in a bakery.
Europe—Whither Bound? Being Letters of Travel from the Capitals of Europe in the Year 1921 Stephen Graham 1929
-
Abu Sofian, resolving to make another and more effectual effort, got together a body of three thousand men, whereof seven hundred were cuirassiers and two hundred cavalry; his wife Henda, with a number of women, followed in the rear, beating drums, and lamenting the fate of those slain at Beder, and exciting the idolaters to fight courageously.
The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 04 Rossiter Johnson 1885
-
Sofian at the head of thirty men, placed a number of soldiers in ambuscade to intercept it.
The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 04 Rossiter Johnson 1885
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.