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mogul
1[moh-guhl]
noun
a bump or mound of hard snow on a ski slope.
Mogul
2[moh-guhl, -guhl, moh-guhl]
noun
any of the Mongol conquerors of India who established an empire that lasted from 1526 to 1857, but held only nominal power after 1803.
any of their descendants.
(lowercase)an important, powerful, or influential person.
a mogul of the movie industry.
a Mongol or Mongolian.
Railroads.a steam locomotive having a two-wheeled front truck, six driving wheels, and no rear truck.
adjective
of or relating to the Moguls or their empire.
Mogul
1/ məʊˈɡʌl, ˈməʊɡʌl /
noun
a member of the Muslim dynasty of Indian emperors established by Baber in 1526 See Great Mogul
a Muslim Indian, Mongol, or Mongolian
adjective
of or relating to the Moguls or their empire
mogul
2/ ˈməʊɡʌl, məʊˈɡʌl /
noun
an important or powerful person
a type of steam locomotive with a wheel arrangement of two leading wheels, six driving wheels, and no trailing wheels
mogul
3/ ˈəʊɡə /
noun
a mound of hard snow on a ski slope
Other Word Forms
- moguled adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of mogul1
Word History and Origins
Origin of mogul1
Origin of mogul2
Origin of mogul3
Example Sentences
Weinstein’s retrial began April 23 and featured emotional testimony from Haley and Mann, who returned to the stand, plus Sokola, who did not testify against the mogul in the 2020 trial.
On that evening of 10 July 2006, the film mogul "lunged" at her from across a couch and kissed her.
A panel of seven female and five male jurors deliberated for five days in the six-week trial before unanimously voting to convict the disgraced film mogul of one of three counts.
She had been mistaken for the then-wife of media mogul Rupert Murdoch and abducted from her London home on 29 December 1969.
Music mogul Scooter Braun has said he was "shocked" by Taylor Swift's "deeply unfair" reaction when he acquired the rights to her first six studio albums.
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