bashaw

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See also: Bashaw

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Variant of pasha.

Pronunciation

Noun

bashaw (plural bashaws)

  1. (now rare, historical) A pasha. [16th-19th c.]
    • 1621, Democritus Junior [pseudonym; Robert Burton], The Anatomy of Melancholy, [], Oxford, Oxfordshire: Printed by John Lichfield and Iames Short, for Henry Cripps, →OCLC, partition II, section 2, member 4:
      Radzivilius was much taken with the bassa’s palace in Cairo […].
    • 1630, John Smith, True Travels, in Kupperman 1988, p. 44:
      The Bashaw notwithstanding drew together a partie of five hundred before his owne Pallace, where he intended to die […].
    • 1809, James Grey Jackson, An Account of the Empire of Marocco, London 1809, p. 79:
      he fancies himself in company with beautiful women; he dreams that he is an emperor, or a bashaw, and that the world is at his nod.
    • 1982, TC Boyle, Water Music, Penguin 2006, p. 7:
      Insecure about his infirmity, the Bashaw decreed that all who desired to come into his presence must first submit to having their eyes put out.
  2. (archaic, often derogatory, by extension) A grandee. [from 16th c.]
  3. A very large siluroid fish (Lua error in Module:taxlink at line 68: Parameter "noshow" is not used by this template.) of the Mississippi valley; the goujon or mudcat.

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