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WordNet
in the south

adv. in a southern direction; "we moved south" [syn: south, to the south]

Wikipedia
In the South (Alassio)

In the South (Alassio), Op. 50, is a concert overture composed by Edward Elgar during a family holiday in Italy in the winter of 1903 to 1904.

The work is dedicated "To my friend Leo F. Schuster".

In the South

In the South may refer to:

  • In the South (Alassio), a concert overture by Edward Elgar
  • In the South (short story), a work of fiction by Salman Rushdie
In the South (short story)

In the South is a work of fiction by Salman Rushdie looking at the meaning of 'a life well lived' from the points of view of two old men with very different personalities.

Category:Works by Salman Rushdie

Usage examples of "in the south".

From the Free Canadians in the north, down through the combined Pacific American-Football City Army in the middle to the anxious Texans in the south, the democratic troops rolled through the areas obliterated by the cluster bombs, got behind the Circle-sponsored trench troops and began a series of wide encircling pincer movement.

Many of the whites who are to be found scattered in the South Seas represent the more artistic portion of their class.

They were on the admirable Apemama plan: out and away the best house in the South Seas.

Of all so-called dancing in the South Seas, that which I saw in Butaritari stands easily the first.

Indeed, and however strange their own function in that austere establishment, were they not escaped for the day from the largest and strictest Ladies' School in the South Seas?

The day before, we had been told by a pair of seasoned hikers that sometimes in the South drivers will swerve at hitchhikers, or run over their packs, for purposes of hilarity, and I supposed this was one of those moments.

The expression left behind was one generations of Cofflins had shown to the sea in its wilder moods, or to a boatload of Papuans trying to storm a whaler cast aground in the South Seas.

Yeager gathered Espfritu Santo lay somewhere in the South Pacific.

Then far away in the south he saw a great Asiatic airship going eastward.

Certainly, there are honorable people in high positions in the South.

He contended that the most interesting nations were the epicene ones, partaking, that is, of the characteristics of both sexes, and he instanced France and Italy, intensely virile in the North, absolutely female in the South.

Slave uprisings, slave massacres, had always been rare and tiny in the South.