Teheran
or Teh·ran
[ te-ran, -rahn, te-huh-, tey-uh-; Persian te-hrahn ]
/ tɛˈræn, -ˈrɑn, ˌtɛ hə-, ˌteɪ ə-; Persian tɛˈhrɑn /
noun
a city in and the capital of Iran, in the N part: wartime conference of Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin 1943.
Definition for teheran (2 of 2)
Iran
[ ih-ran, ih-rahn, ahy-ran ]
/ ɪˈræn, ɪˈrɑn, aɪˈræn /
noun
a republic in SW Asia. About 635,000 sq. mi. (1,644,650 sq. km). Capital: Teheran.
Formerly
Persia.
Example sentences from the Web for teheran
British Dictionary definitions for teheran
Iran
/ (ɪˈrɑːn) /
noun
a republic in SW Asia, between the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf: a monarchy until an Islamic revolution in 1979 headed by the Ayatollah Khomeini when the Shah was obliged to leave the country. Consists chiefly of a high central desert plateau almost completely surrounded by mountains, a semitropical fertile region along the Caspian coast, and a hot and dry area beside the Persian Gulf. Oil is the most important export. Official language: Persian (Iranian or Farsi). Official religion: Muslim majority. Currency: rial. Capital: Tehran. Pop: 79 853 900 (2013 est). Area: 1 647 050 sq km (635 932 sq miles)
Former name (until 1935): Persia Official name: Islamic Republic of Iran See also Persian Empire
Cultural definitions for teheran (1 of 2)
Teheran
[ (te-rahn, te-ran, tay-uh-rahn, tay-uh-ran) ]
Capital of Iran and the largest city in the country; located in northern Iran.
notes for Teheran
Site of the Teheran Conference (1943), at which United States President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, British
Prime Minister Winston
Churchill, and Soviet
Premier Joseph
Stalin met and agreed on Allied war plans and postwar cooperation in the
United Nations.
Cultural definitions for teheran (2 of 2)
Iran
[ (i-ran, i-rahn, eye-ran) ]
Republic in the Middle East, bordered by Armenia, the Caspian Sea, Turkmenistan, and Azerbaijan to the north; Afghanistan and Pakistan to the east; the Gulf of Oman and the Persian Gulf to the south; and Iraq and Turkey to the west. Its capital and largest city is Teheran.
notes for Iran
Core of the ancient
Persian Empire, Iran was known as Persia until 1935.
notes for Iran
The United States supported the
regime of the shah (king) Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, who was forced by popular opposition to leave the country in 1979.
notes for Iran
Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini ruled from 1979 until his death in 1989, imposing strict Islamic law.
notes for Iran
In 1979, Iranian militants attacked the U.S. embassy and seized hostages, including sixty-two Americans, who were held until 1981.
notes for Iran
Iraq unsuccessfully invaded Iran in 1980.
notes for Iran
The Iranian government was widely believed to have controlled the taking of U. S. hostages in
Lebanon. (
See
Iran-Contra affair.)
notes for Iran
The 1990s saw some moderating elements emerge to challenge the
conservative heirs to Khomeini.