Sign of Iranian indifference?
Crossword Clue

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AnswerCrossword Clue
PERSIANSHRUGSign of Iranian indifference?
MEDEIranian of old
INDOKind of Iranian
MEDEIranian of yore
MEDEIranian, of old
RIALUnit of Iranian currency
SHAHIranian ruler of old
RIALIranian unit of currency
RIALSUnits of Iranian currency
MESHEDPOTATOESIranian source of starch?
SHAHToppled Iranian leader of 1979
DARDMember of Turko-Iranian tribe.
MAJLISLower house of Iranian Parliament.
BAHAIMember of an Iranian sect
SHAHSCasualties of the Iranian Revolution
MEDEMember of an Iranian people
SHIRAZIranian city of 1.2+ million
MEDEMember of an ancient Iranian people
MEDESMembers of an ancient Iranian people
QOMIranian city of almost 1,000,000
medianthe Iranian language of ancient Media, contemporaneous with Old Persian
hojatoleslaman Iranian cleric below the rank of ayatollah also HOJATOLISLAM
hojatolislaman Iranian cleric below the rank of ayatollah also HOJATOLESLAM
mediansthe Iranian language of ancient Media, contemporaneous with Old Persian
hojatoleslamsHOJATOLESLAM, an Iranian cleric below the rank of ayatollah also HOJATOLISLAM
hojatolislamsHOJATOLISLAM, an Iranian cleric below the rank of ayatollah also HOJATOLESLAM
pahlavithe Indo-European, Iranian language of the Zoroastrian literature of the 3rd to the 10th centuries
pahlavisthe Indo-European, Iranian language of the Zoroastrian literature of the 3rd to the 10th centuries
afghaniIndo-European, Iranian language that is the official language of Afghanistan and the chief vernacular of the eastern part of the nation
afghanisIndo-European, Iranian language that is the official language of Afghanistan and the chief vernacular of the eastern part of the nation
afghanIndo-European, Iranian language that is the official language of Afghanistan and the chief vernacular of the eastern part of the nation
satembelonging to or consisting of those branches of the Indo-European family in which alveolar or palatal fricatives, as the sounds (s) or (sh), developed in ancient times from Proto-Indo-European palatal stops: the satem branches are Indo-Iranian, Armenian,