Definition of Negus

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Perhaps negus and sheep broth have never been transmitted under such dangerous circumstances. Two garbage collectors recently denied the difference between Bishop and Negus. Well, Heffernan, order me a glass of Claret Negus and make sure no one worries us with the messages from home. “Negus.” dictionary Merriam-Webster.com, Merriam-Webster, www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/negus. Accessed October 11, 2022. Negus (Ge`ez: ንጉሥ, nəgueś [nɨgueɬ]; cf. Tigrinya: ነጋሲ negus [negus]) is a title in Ethiopian Semitic languages. [1] It refers to a monarch,[2] such as the Negus Bahri (King of the Sea) of the Medri Bahri Kingdom in Eritrea before 1890 and the Negus in Ethiopia before 1974. The Negus is called in the Islamic tradition Al-Najashi (النجاشي). The Negus was brought in and paid by Gager, who then asked that they be left there undisturbed for five minutes. Negus is a name derived from the Ethiopian-Semitic root ngś, which means “to rule”. The title was later used to translate the word “king” or “emperor” in biblical and other literature. More recently, it has been used as an honorary title awarded to the governors of the most important provinces (kingdoms): Gojjam, Begemder, Wollo, Tigray and the Offshore Kingdom (where the Variant Bahri Negasi “King of the Sea” was the former title of the ruler of today`s Central Eritrea) and later Shewa.

[3] [4] Amharic nÉgus, de Geez nÄgūša nagaÅ¡t King of kings borrowed from the Amharic ንጉሥ (nəguś, “king”). 1590s, borrowed from the Amharic ንጉሥ (nəguś, “king, sovereign”), itself borrowing from Ge`ez ንጉሥ (nəguś, “king, sovereign”), from the verb ነግሠ (nägśä, “rule”). This article related to Ethiopian royalty is a heel. You can help Wikipedia by extending it. according to Francis Negus in 1732 English colonel, to whom the invention of the drink of M. Negus is attributed, it is said that “he was a really good man and a useful preacher”. Named after Colonel Francis Negus (died 1732), its creator.

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