Candian

Etymology 1
or

Adjective

 * 1)  Of or relating to Crete or its inhabitants.
 * 2)  Of or relating to the Cretan city of  or its inhabitants.
 * 1)  Of or relating to the Cretan city of  or its inhabitants.
 * 1)  Of or relating to the Cretan city of  or its inhabitants.

Noun

 * 1)  An inhabitant of Crete.
 * 2) * 1581, (translator), Theatrum Mundi, The Theatre or rule of the world by, London: John Wyght, “To the Reader,”
 * Let them consider howe Epiminedes the Greeke spake unto the Candians, calling them cruell and abhominable beastes, braynelesse lyars.
 * 1)  An inhabitant of the Cretan city of.
 * 1)  An inhabitant of the Cretan city of.

Adjective

 * 1)  Of or relating to the  on the island now known as Sri Lanka.
 * 2) * 1810, Arthur Johnston, Narrative of the Operations of a Detachment in an expedition to Candy, in the Island of Ceylon, in the Year 1804, London: C. & R. Baldwin, p. 126,
 * The difficulty of procuring good guides is very great. There are, it is true, always men ready to undertake for hire the task of conducting our troops through the Candian country.

Noun

 * 1)  An inhabitant of the  on the island now known as Sri Lanka.
 * 2) * 1700, S. L. (translator), A Relation of Two Several Voyages Made into the East-Indies by Christopher Fryke and Christopher Schewitzer, London: D. Brown et al., “Mr. Schewitzer’s Voyage,” Chapter 7, p. 321,
 * We retired towards Sittawack, and passed by a steep Rock; whence it is reported, That the late King of Sittawack’s Wife and Daughter flung themselves down headlong, having received the News that he had lost the Battle against the King of Candi. The Candians all the while came after us, but were not able to do us any great harm, because the ways were so narrow that they could not come up to us.