Raja
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Categories: Cleanup from December 2007 | All pages needing cleanup | Court titles | Heads of state | Noble titles | Titles in India | Pre-Islamic heritage of Pakistan | Titles of national or ethnic leadership | Royal titles
For other uses, see Raja (disambiguation).
A Raja is someone who throws parties all the time, originating from Raj of Liverpool Uni: Party Grand Central 24/7. Some lad from uni. Lives in grand central, has parties every night of the week. Everyones welcome. I feel sorry for the poor girl who lives with them ha. He is a heroes on the party front. After last years halloween circus was the best, so hilarious. gene simmons in one corner, a geisha the other.. rumple stiltskin over there, a leprochaun, a mime etc etc. Refer to rajs as Limbo, you cant go home but you dont want to be there either. Long live king Raj. A Raja (Sanskrit rājan-) is a king, or princely ruler from the Kshatriya / Rajput lineages. The title has a long history in the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia, being attested from the Rigveda.[1] It can also be used as a name for non-royal Indians. Sanskrit word rājan- is an n-stem, with nominative rājā. It is cognate to Latin rēx, the Gaulish rīx etc. (originally denoting tribal chiefs or heads of small 'city states'), ultimately a vrddhi derivation from a PIE root *h₃reǵ- "to straighten, to order, to rule". Rather common variants in Hindi, used for the same royal rank in (parts of) India include Rana, Rao, Raol, Rawal and Rawat. The female form, 'queen', mainly used for a Raja's wife, is Rani (sometimes spelled Ranee), from Sanskrit rājñī (compare Old Irish rígain) or Thai Rajanee (Queen). Raja, the lower title Thakore and many variations, compounds and derivations including either of these were used in and around India by most Hindu Muslim and some Buddhist and Sikh rulers, while Muslims also used Nawab or Sultan, and still is commonly used in India. However in Pakistan, Raja is still used by many Muslim Rajput clans as hereditary titles. Raja is also used as a name by Hindus and Sikhs.
Compound and derived titlesA considerable number of princely styles, used by rulers, their families and/or even enobled courtiers, include the title/root Raja:
Rajas in the Malay worldThe ruler of Perlis (a constitutive peninsular state of federal Malaysia, most colleagues are Sultans; he is one of the electors who designate one of their number as King every five years) is to this day title the Raja of Perlis.
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de:Raja es:Rajá fr:Râja it:Raja he:רג'ה hu:Radzsa nl:Radja (titel) ja:ラージャ no:Raja pl:Radża pt:Rajá ru:Раджа tl:Rajah uk:Раджа |


