Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue ""The Pianist" setting ", 6 letters:
warsaw

Alternative clues for the word warsaw

Word definitions for warsaw in dictionaries

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 3814 Housing Units (2000): 1575 Land area (2000): 4.123760 sq. miles (10.680490 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 4.123760 sq. miles (10.680490 sq. km) FIPS code: 78333 Located within: ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Warsaw is the capital city of Poland. Warsaw may also refer to:

Usage examples of warsaw.

The Russians could not help noting that whereas the British had sent the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, General Sir Edmund Ironside, to Warsaw in July for military talks with the Polish General Staff, they did not consider sending this ranking British officer to Moscow.

International, and Devi Prasad, WRI general secretary, had taken nonviolent direct action to Eastern Europe in September 1968, leafleting a number of capitals in protest against the Soviet and Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia.

To the Pyry forest near Warsaw, on a mysterious mission of great importance.

But Henry Scrimshaw is known in every bar where journalists hang out, from Chungking to Addis Ababa, from Guadalajara to Warsaw.

She was very much surprised to meet me in Warsaw, and still more so at the news I gave her.

Sharon came out of the Old Warsaw Bakery, on Aldine Street, and let him hug her.

Warsaw Bakery on the comer of Aldine Street and Chanrellor A venue in Newark, N.

During these years Gombos paid a visit to Ankara and Warsaw with the aim to create with the help of Turkey and Poland a line of defense against the imperialistic threatening from the West and from the East.

The idea was, of course, to reassure the Jewsthe Jews of Warsaw, Radom, and the Bialystok districts whom the camp had serviced.

Zionist leaders left Warsaw when the army evacuated the city but, unlike the Bundists, none returned when they heard that the capital was to be held.

I tried to get through on the telephone to Warsaw, London and Paris but was told that communications with these capitals were cut.

I was making way for the lady the count recognized me, and asked me if I knew anything about the Casanova that had fought the duel at Warsaw.

The dancing girl Binetti, who assisted Casanova in his flight from Stuttgart in 1760, whom he met again in London in 1763, and who was the cause of his duel with Count Branicki at Warsaw in 1766.

Poland ordered army mobilization along the Czechoslovakian border, and there were boisterous mass demonstrations in Warsaw and in other Polish cities.

He looked around the room and wondered what snapshots the flashbulbs of Warsaw would take.