Indo-Chinese: tribes of Laos, speaking a dialect of Siamese.

Mongol or Mongolian.

Correctly Moghol, the typical dialect of a large family of Turanian languages, allied to Mantshu and Turkee; it is spoken in Central Asia, and written in perpendicular lines, reading from left to right. An old form of character is called Baspa-Moghol, and a modern variation is known as Galik. Dicty. (1855), Grammar (1831), by Schmidt, St. Petersburg. See [Kalmuk].

Mongoyo.

American: a sub-division of Camacan spoken in the province of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, classed as Botocudo. See [Kamakan].

Mongrebin, Mogrebin.

Semitic: a dialect of Arabic spoken in Africa; it is the vernacular speech of the Moors (anciently of Mauritania) and vernacular in Algiers, Barbary, and Marocco. It is called Moorish or Moghrib-el-Aksa. Grammar and Vocaby. by De Dombay, Vienne, 1800; see also “Asiatic Jl.,” 1828.

Monogram.

Single letter, one letter duplicated, any combination of initials into one device; a single character used for an entire word, as the Arabic numerals.