Búri – מילון אנגלי-עברי
לצערנו, לא נמצאו תוצאות בעברית עבור "Búri"
Buri
Buri may refer to:
- Taj al-Mulk Buri, atabeg of Damascus and namesake of its Burid dynasty
- Búri, a Norse god
- The Buri, an ancient Germanic people
- The Buri, a Latin name of the Burs, an ancient Dacian people
- Buri, Brazil, a city near São Paulo
- Buri, Bahrain, a village
- Buri, Iran, a village
- The buri palm, a name for trees of the genus Corypha
- Buri, a Japanese name for Japanese amberjack, yellowtail, and hamachi used in English in reference to their sushi
- The Buri Peninsula in Eritrea
- Büri, a prince of the Chagatai Khanate.
- Buri, various places in Thailand
Búri
Büri
Büri (died 1252) was a son of
Mutukan and a grandson of
Chagatai Khan. His name, Büri, means "Wolf". According to
Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, Büri's mother was a wife of Chagatai Khan's one official. She was a beauty, and Mutukan was attracted by her while she served in the Khan's
ger. Mutukan made her pregnant and instead of marrying her, he took her baby, Büri.
Buri
[Norse] Buri is the primeval man in Norse mythology. He had neither father nor mother, but was created by a cow named Audhumla. As she licked the salt blocks of Ginnagagap, the shape of a man -- Buri -- was formed. Buri had a son named Bor. Bor had three sons who were gods: Odin, Vili, and Ve.
Buri
Buri, Bore (Icelandic, Swedish) [from burdr birth] Primeval progenitor of cosmic life in the Norse Eddas. During the "frost giant" (long ages of nonlife) the cow Audhumla (symbol of fertility) licked salt from the blocks of ice which were all that existed in the Great Void (Ginnungagap). She uncovered the head of Buri, first divine being. From him emanated Bur (which corresponds to the Second Logos of Greek thought), and he in turn gave rise to the trinity of creators -- Odin, Vile, and Vi -- who brought the worlds into being.
In Scandinavian lands King Bore or Buri still symbolizes the cold which reigns during the long winter.