And at such time this rare maiden cometh down from her palace and solaceth herself with beholding the Bazars and anon she entereth the Hammam and batheth therein and straightway goeth forth and fareth homewards.
The Warlock rejoined, "Arise now to thy work lest it be miswrought by loitering;" and so saying he ate whatso of meats had been served up to him and fared forth to thread the Bazars of Baghdad and solace himself by seeing the city.
When I was as old I remember the Shah, with some others of us, used to have frolics now and then in the bazars of Isfahan.
The Kharias never make iron themselves, but are altogether dependent on the neighbouring bazars for their supplies.
Travellers, however, in passing rapidly through towns, may be easily deceived, for they see only the bazars and certain streets, in which the greater part of the male population is usually assembled during the day.
In 1813, the Christian community of Gous, in Upper Egypt, had the honour of possessing an insane youth, who walked about the bazars quite naked.
Its streets and bazars are small, narrow, and dirty; but its houses are not ill built.
One was nearly of fall size, and was well known in the bazars and thoroughfares of Hillah, through which he was allowed to wander unrestrained.
Two handsome khans, withbazars attached, were nearly finished.
The bazars have an appearance of poverty, yet the regularity of the streets gives an air of great neatness to the place, and the view both of the country and town, as seen from the rampart, must be considered very fine.
The bazars of Saigon contain in greater abundance all that is to be found in those of Bingeh.
Few of the shops in the bazars appear to contain goods of greater value than might be purchased for forty or sixty dollars, and the greater number are not worth half that sum.
Here also you can buy izars to walk about the bazars incognita.
The bazarsliterally swarmed with a picturesque and variegated mob, hailing from all lands, and of every race and tongue.
The bazars of Constantinople have been so often described that it would be useless to describe them at any length.
The Turkish bazars have a miserable aspect; they are nothing more than an immense labyrinth of large vaulted galleries, clumsily built, and at all times damp in the extreme.
It is in the long corridors of the bazars that the commercial business of the country is carried on.
I was a model of this kind of carefulness while my opportunities lasted; but my companions had left me, and this morning I went to the bazars and bought a couple of shirts.
If there be one thing in the world that the small Hill Rajahs deny it is just this charge; but it happens to be one thing that the bazars believe, when they discuss the mysterious slave-traffics of India.
The hot and crowded bazars blazed with light as they made their way through the press of all the races in Upper India, and the lama mooned through it like a man in a dream.
He did not care for any of the bazarswhich were in bounds.
If you choose, I will smoke with you, for the tobacco of the bazars does not, I admit, suit my palate; and I will borrow any books which you may not specially value.
India has gossiped for centuries--always standing in the bazars until the soldiers go by.
He wished to go shopping in the bazars on Wednesday, and he "desired" the troops to be turned out on a Thursday.
The loaf sold in the bazars is thoroughly useless.
The white "mill flour" that is sold in our bazars is quite useless; it contains no nutriment at all.
The bazars of the city, crowded with busy purchasers, present a bustling scene to the stranger.
After Constantinople, Damascus claims precedence for the quantity and richness of the stuffs displayed for sale in its bazarsfrom all countries in the world.
If there be one thing in the world that the small hill Rajahs deny it is just this charge; but it happens to be one thing that the bazars believe, when they discuss the mysterious slave-traffics of India.
Woe be to the unwary who approach these bazars without the ability to "bargain"; for there is ever a scale of prices, and the topmost one is usually exorbitant!
These, of course, were larger and more pretentious than the bazars spoken of elsewhere, some of them being three stories in height, the first of the kind we had seen in Japan.
We visited bazars and noted the general aspect of the place, canals being a dominant characteristic of the landscape.
The bazars in the European quarter are unusually fine, and it was a pleasure to visit them, silks, curios, and silver work being well displayed.
Some of the old irregular thoroughfares on which the bazars are situated radiate from the wider and more important Muski; then, again, there are narrower alley-like streets, a veritable tangle!
The long streets are lined with bazars of the usual plan but much larger; workers in brass predominated, that being a specialty of Jeypore.
Illustration: Aden, Arabia] The bazars are similar in arrangement to those in Cairo; but more novel wares are displayed, and less bargaining is resorted to.
Hence many dealers in thebazars have secured the deserted Oriental homes, and now live in comparative luxury, showing that conditions and residential centres change in the Old World as well as in the New.
The bazars too were found unusually interesting on a closer inspection, and offered many new and novel articles.
Further visits to the streets and bazars revealed new scenes, and such a variety of nationalities!
They extended from an upper story, for these bazars were many of them on the ground floor of four-story apartments, each story having its front gallery where one could witness diversified scenes of family life.
The bazars in Mukden were not unlike those throughout China in their arrangement, but containing not nearly so attractive a display of goods.
We visited the shops and bazars before luncheon, and in the afternoon all of us explored the native Malay quarter.
What was the lake again became a crowded capital; the bazars were thronged with folk who bought and sold; each citizen was occupied with his own calling and the four hills became islands as they were whilome.
That sold in the bazars is not the real grey ore of antimony but a galena or sulphuret of lead.
FN#6] Late in the afternoon I used to rise, perform ablution, and repair to the Harim, or wander about the bazars till sunset.
The main street of tents and booths, huts and shops, was bright with lanterns, and the bazars were crowded with people and stocked with all manner of Eastern delicacies.
After awhile, the people reappeared and the bazars filled.
After an hour or so, the people reappeared and every one who had a shop entered it; whilst the folk began to come and go about the bazars and gathered around the slain man, staring at him as a curiosity.
So Sidi Nur al-Din went walking in the highways of the city and viewing its edifices and its bazars and thoroughfares and gazing on its folk.
The leaf in form of a dry powder is sold in the bazars of India under the name of "henna"; mixed with water it gives it a yellow color, and when boiled the tone of the liquid becomes darker; the addition of an alkali turns it brown.
We do not know to what use the Filipinos put this plant, but in India the sweet flowers are dried and sold in the bazars under the name of Nag-Kasar or Nagesur, which is used as a mild stimulant, but especially as a perfume.
The incised trunk exudes a gum which is used in India as a substitute for gum arabic and there is an active trade in this gum in the bazars of Bombay and Calcutta.
The bazars are large and very busy, and are considerably more picturesque than those of Kirmanshah.
So bad is it that, dearly as Orientals love bazars and hammams, Hadji refuses leave to go to either.
I have tried to get a bed made, but there is no wood strong enough for the purpose, and the bazars cannot produce any canvas.
Cook-shops abound, but their viands are not tempting, and the bazars are pervaded by a pungent odour of hot sesamum oil and rancid fat, frying being a usual mode of cooking in these restaurants.
A stroll through the Tihran bazars shows the observer something of the extent and rapidity with which Europe is ruining the artistic taste of Asia.
All the business transacted in the bazars is a matter of bargaining, and as Arabs shout at the top of their voices, and buyers and sellers are equally keen, the roar is tremendous.
At any hour of daylight at this season progress through the bazars is slow.
It is chiefly in the fine lofty saddlery bazar and some small bazars that native manufactures are en evidence.
It was a serious start, so terribly slippery in the heaped-up alleys and uncoveredbazars of Kangawar that several of the mules and men fell.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bazars" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.