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indianization การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The kingdom likely accelerated the process of Indianization of Southeast Asia.
  • The Brahmi script spread in a peaceful manor, Indianization, or the spread of Indian learning.
  • The caste system was never adopted, but Indianization stimulated the rise of highly organised, centralised states.
  • Indianization was fostered by increasing contact with the subcontinent through the travels of merchants, diplomats, and learned Brahmins.
  • Scholars locate the historical beginnings of Champa in the 4th century, when the process of Indianization was well underway.
  • He also championed Indianization : the admission of Indians into the higher ( British ) officer corps of the Indian Army.
  • With Indian independence and Indianization of commercial establishments in the country, the Europeans in the board left handing the company to Indians.
  • Amin used this propaganda to justify a campaign of " de-Indianization ", eventually resulting in the expulsion and ethnic cleansing of Uganda's Indian minority.
  • "Gerard has a crusade going, the Indianization of the battlefield, " an editor of The Custer Little Bighorn Battlefield Advocate, Bob Wells, said.
  • Although there is more to be explored on the dynamics of indigenization, examples such as Indonesianization in Irian Jaya and Indianization in Sri Lanka show the possibility of alternatives to Americanization.
  • "We're talking about an enemy that's been defeated in the Indian wars and they're going overboard in the Indianization of the whole place ."
  • Whereas early 20th-century scholars emphasized the thorough Indianization of Southeast Asia, more recent authors argued that this influence was very limited and affected only a small section of the elite.
  • Specialization : pre-colonial South and Southeast Asian History; early state formation and historiography; regional cultures of India with emphasis on Orissa; Indianization of Southeast Asia and Indian Ocean Studies.
  • He fused traditional calypso with an up-tempo " soca " beat, what he called the " Indianization of calypso, " bringing together the music of his Caribbean nation's two major ethnic groups, descendants of African slaves and of indentured laborers from India.
  • Hinting that Portugal would yet be vindicated, Salazar went on to state that " difficulties will arise for both sides when the programme of the Indianization of Goa begins to clash with its inherent culture . . . It is therefore to be expected that many Goans will wish to escape to Portugal from the inevitable consequences of the invasion ."
  • He possessed a significant knowledge of North America and was critical of American expansionism in his 1968 anthropological study and book, " Man's Rise to Civilization " . . . In it, he writes that the " White Man " owes a debt from his acculturation or " indianization, " comparable in some ways to the Roman acculturation in conquering the Greeks.