Examples of using Subdistrict in English and their translations into Vietnamese
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
Al-Khandaq al-Gharbi(Arabic: الخندق الغربي al-khandaq al-gharbī) is a Syrian village located in the Suqaylabiyah Subdistrict of the al-Suqaylabiyah District in Hama Governorate.
is a Syrian village located in the Karnaz Subdistrict of the Mahardah District in Hama Governorate.
It is the administrative center of the Khirbet al-Ma'zah Subdistrict(nahiyah) which consisted of 11 localities with a collective population of 22,897.[1]
It is the administrative center of the Rawda Subdistrict(nahiyah) which consisted of nine localities with a collective population of 11,688.[1]
a collective population of 8,214 in 2004.[2] The inhabitants of the town and the subdistrict are predominantly Sunni Muslims of Turkmen origin.[3].
It is the administrative center of the Talin Subdistrict which contained five localities with a collective population of 8,351 in 2004.[1] Its inhabitants are predominantly Alawites.[2].
is a Syrian village located in the Masyaf Subdistrict in Masyaf District,
in the 2004 census, making it the third largest locality in the subdistrict of Khirbet Tin Nur.[1]
Its is the administrative center of the al-Bariqiyah Subdistrict, which consisted of eight localities with a total population of 7,336.[1]
Zammar was previously part of al-Zirbah Subdistrict until 2009, it later became a subdistrict itself.[2].
is a Syrian village located in the Subdistrict of the Hama District in the Hama Governorate.
is a Syrian village in the Salamiyah Subdistrict in Salamiyah District,
road side or street, subdistrict, zoo and so on.
also known as al-Huwayz or Huweiz) is a village in northern Syria located in the Qalaat al-Madiq Subdistrict of the al-Suqaylabiyah District in Hama Governorate.
population of 13,513 in the 2004 census, making it the largest locality in the Qalaat al-Madiq nahiyah("subdistrict.")[1].
Talaf and the subdistrict(nahiyah) center Hirbnafsah to the east, Bisin and Jidrin to the northeast
Its inhabitants are predominantly Sunni Muslims.[2] The town is the administrative center of the Armanaz Subdistrict(nahiyah), consisting of 12 villages with a combined population of 27,267.
It is the administrative center of the subdistrict, which consists of 21 localities with a combined population of 12,951 in 2004.[1] The village had a population of around 1,000 in the early 1960s.[2]
It is the administrative center of the Qatana Subdistrict, which contained 20 localities with a collective population of 147,451 in 2004.[1] Prior to the Syrian Civil War,
predominantly Turkmen Sunni Muslim,[2] and the inhabitants of the surrounding villages and subdistrict are predominantly Alawites.[3].