Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- proper noun Alternative form of
Transcaucasia .
Etymologies
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Examples
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Peaches, apricots, cherries and plums all came from Central Asia; the banana and the mango had ancestral links to India; pears originated in the Transcaucasus; wild grapes first grew east of the Black Sea; untamed quinces and mulberries cavorted near the Caspian; the watermelon emerged in tropical Africa.
The Fruit Hunters Adam Leith Gollner 2008
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Bush is in no position to do anything about it on his own; the Europeans are incapable of taking action; and the only other possible player the Turks hvae their own agenda in the Transcaucasus.
"This war did not begin because of a miscalculation by Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili. Ann Althouse 2008
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Peaches, apricots, cherries and plums all came from Central Asia; the banana and the mango had ancestral links to India; pears originated in the Transcaucasus; wild grapes first grew east of the Black Sea; untamed quinces and mulberries cavorted near the Caspian; the watermelon emerged in tropical Africa.
The Fruit Hunters Adam Leith Gollner 2008
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Peaches, apricots, cherries and plums all came from Central Asia; the banana and the mango had ancestral links to India; pears originated in the Transcaucasus; wild grapes first grew east of the Black Sea; untamed quinces and mulberries cavorted near the Caspian; the watermelon emerged in tropical Africa.
The Fruit Hunters Adam Leith Gollner 2008
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The whole scheme aims to benefit the US-Anglo alliance, cut off Russia, China and Iran, and "weaken competing European oil interests in the Transcaucasus and Central Asia."
Reviewing Michel Chossudovsky's America's War on Terrorism 2007
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The whole scheme aims to benefit the US-Anglo alliance, cut off Russia, China and Iran, and "weaken competing European oil interests in the Transcaucasus and Central Asia."
Reviewing Michel Chossudovsky's America's War on Terrorism 2007
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In 1918 a weakened and defeated Russia spawned three new states built on old ethnic identities in the Transcaucasus: Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.
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The northern slopes of these mountains, properly called the North Caucasus, contain various ethnic chieftaincies that are now part of the Russian Federation; the region to the south of the highest ridges is called the Transcaucasus — the land of Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.
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In 1918 a weakened and defeated Russia spawned three new states built on old ethnic identities in the Transcaucasus: Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.
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The northern slopes of these mountains, properly called the North Caucasus, contain various ethnic chieftaincies that are now part of the Russian Federation; the region to the south of the highest ridges is called the Transcaucasus — the land of Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.
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