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Revision as of 06:13, 20 February 2017 editVolunteer Marek (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers94,174 edits is that joke?← Previous edit Revision as of 09:19, 20 February 2017 edit undoStevo D (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users605 edits Not at all. The only source is an anecdote, and a weak anecdotal source as that--there is no widespread evidence of nazis being referred to en masse as 'Muslims'Next edit →
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In ] the word "]" was a derogatory term used among captives to refer to those resigned to their impending death resulting from extended ] and exhaustion.<ref>Levi, Primo. ''If this is a man'', Everyman's Library (2000)</ref>


{{wiktionary|مسلمان}} {{wiktionary|مسلمان}}

Revision as of 09:19, 20 February 2017

Musalmân
The word Mosalmân is the common term for Muslim among Central Asian Muslim communities

Musulmán/Mosalmán (Template:Lang-fa) is a synonym for Muslim. This term is modified from Arabic. It is the origin of the Spanish word musulmán, the (dated) German Muselmann, the French word musulman, the Polish words muzułmanin and muzułmański, the Portuguese word muçulmano, the Italian word mussulmano or musulmano, the Romanian word musulman and the Greek word μουσουλμάνος (all used for a Muslim). In English it was sometimes spelled Mussulman and has become archaic in usage.

Apart from Persian, Spanish, Polish, Portuguese, Italian, and Greek, the term could be found, with obvious local differences, in Armenian, Dari, Pashto, Urdu, Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Panjabi, Turkish, Kazakh, Uzbek, Kyrgyz, Azeri, Maltese, Hungarian, Czech, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Russian, Serbian, Ukrainian, Romanian, Dutch, and Sanskrit.

References

  1. Musalman - Internet Encyclopedia of Religion
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