Mihr un-nissa (queen of women), so they call the little maid Dreaming by the marble fountain where but yesterday she played.
Mihr-un-nissa stood looking after them as they disappeared, nodding her head with a superior air.
Mihr-un-nissa took it and stood holding it, her unfathomable eyes full of malicious contempt.
When Mihr-un-nissa fled from the Prince in the garden, she did not fly far.
Twill be a place whereon a wife may lay her kisses," retorted Mihr-un-nissa hastily, then grew crimson with shame at having inadvertently used an argument which had evidently done duty in sparring matches on the subject with her mother.
Mihr-un-nissa looked arch in return and positively made a moue of uncontrollable high spirits before she put on an air of immense and demure propriety.
The command reduced even Mihr-un-nissa to the conventional quiet which on such occasions sinks on an Indian woman's house, when those are within who should not be seen.
This time the chanted words thrilled little Mihr-un-nissa through and through.
Mihr-un-nissa knows, and she--she has no mercy when she feels power!
To begin with, she had found out that Mihr-un-nissa was not as other girls.
Mihr-un-nissa when the formula was over, "that's done.
Sharafat-Nissa heard the shout also, and, as she rocked backwards and forwards over her evening chant of the Holy Book, gave a covetous upward glance at the slender figure she could just see among the wings of the doves.
The cousin lives close to the Chowk," put in Fakr-un-nissa faintly.
I do remember it," said Fakr-un-nissa half to herself.
Zeenut-on Nissa enjoys a pension of ten thousand rupees a-month, in her own right, under the guarantee of the British Government.
Count Kevenhuller was obliged to retreat from Servia; and Nissa was retaken by the Mussulmen.
At Nissa they found a well-fortified city, where Bulgarians looked down from the walls on the Crusaders, and these last did not dare to try their strength on such an obstacle.
Sidenote: A Great Loss] At Nissa they seemed to have obtained supplies and marched on.
Taj-ool-Nissa had taken Maria up to the set of her own private apartments she most liked to live in.
Taj-ool-Nissa was a slight girl, about seventeen years old; not so fair as the Queen Regent, but with an air of good breeding and distinction that could not be mistaken.
What would not Taj-ool-Nissa do for the physician who had aided her recovery, or for the beloved companion who had cheered her loneliness?
He found the Queen Taj-ool-Nissa the mother of a fine boy; and as she put it into his arms, she besought his blessing on the child, which he gave solemnly.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nissa" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.