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Answer for the clue "One of the men waiting in "Waiting for Godot" ", 8 letters:
vladimir

Alternative clues for the word vladimir

Word definitions for vladimir in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Vladimir of Paris (born Vyacheslav Mikhaylovich Tichonitsky, Вячеслав Михайлович Тихони́цкий March 22, 1873–December 18, 1959 Paris ) was an Eastern Orthodox archbishop and metropolitan of, successively, the Moscow Patriarchate , Russian Orthodox Church ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
masc. proper name, from Old Church Slavonic Vladimiru "Ruling Peace," from vlasti "to rule over" (from PIE *wal- "to be strong") + miru "peace" (see Mir ).

Usage examples of vladimir.

That same evening Vladimir Dolkov crossed the Zonal boundary once again, having made no secret of the fact that he must visit the Charlottenburg area.

Inside the building on the corner of Dzerzhinsky Square, where Vladimir Dolkov worked, lights had come on in one office after another.

Eager as he was to question his wife, Vladimir made himself concentrate on his work until it was time to leave the office.

Nevertheless, it had to accommodate not only Vladimir and Natalia, but their two daughters and their babushka, who managed the household while Natalia taught at the local kindergarten.

After all, they had shared the same house for many months and Vladimir knew his brother.

In his excitement Vladimir had permitted his voice to rise, and there was a sudden burst of coughing from the adjoining living-room.

The day ended happily, in spite of tears of farewell, and Vladimir Dolkov went to bed with his Natalia well pleased with himself and the turn of events.

If Vladimir planned to use the child in some way, she had no doubt it would be for the benefit of Russia.

But she reminded herself of the story she had agreed with Vladimir, and hastened to eliminate any threatening element from her approach.

Harrods where Pandora lived with her husband and her son, a letter addressed to Vladimir Dolkov at his office in Dzerzhinsky Square arrived in Moscow via the diplomatic bag.

It was not the first letter that Anna had written home, but Vladimir knew as soon as he inspected the envelope that this was an important one.

Recognizing the sign that he and Anna had agreed upon before she left for London, Vladimir read through the letter, once rapidly, the second time with the greatest care.

The boy, he thought with some irritation, would at his age probably welcome a stuffed bear himself, but Suddenly Vladimir was still.

The problem was how to get all this to Vladimir, without arousing the interest of the Soviet authorities.

She, like Vladimir, had no illusions about the probable results for herself, for Sergei, for Vladimir and his family, if her activities were discovered.