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A native or inhabitant of Argentina
Answer for the clue "A native or inhabitant of Argentina ", 11 letters:
argentinian
Word definitions for argentinian in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Argentinian \Argentinian\ n. 1. a native or inhabitant of Argentina.
Usage examples of argentinian.
Mainly because we do not know the relative strength of the Argentinian fleet, nor its land forces.
He never brought the carrier within range, except at night, when he knew the Argentinian Air Force did not fly.
And it still stands today, still frequented by Argentinian military personnel, right next to the venerable old Harrods building, that far-lost symbol of a far-lost friendship.
The Argentinian Minister, whose name was Freddie, turned and held up his hand.
General Moreno was Commander in Chief Fleet, a position once held by the hawkish Argentinian patriot Admiral Jorge Anaya, the man who had taken his nation to war in the Falkland Islands twenty-eight years ago.
In fact there was a group of Argentinian military officers who had thought of hardly anything else for a quarter of a century.
South Atlantic in 1982, of 15,000 Argentinian troops and commandoes surrendering to a couple of hundred British paratroopers.
Cordoba Avenue in Buenos Aires, the very place where the Russian Trade Minister Gregor Komoyedov had charmed the jackboots off the two Argentinian officers.
May 21, the opening day of the 1982 war, it took about three minutes and one British thousand-pound bomb to render Argentinian takeoffs and landings from the Falklands virtually impossible for fast-jet aircraft, for the entire duration of the war.
Worse yet, for the Brits, this Argentinian High Command knew just about everything there was to know about the troops they regarded as occupying forces in the Malvinas.
Falkland Sound, in the hours before the British destroyer was sunk by Argentinian bombs.
It had absolutely nothing to do with the Argentinian naval base located in that city.
The rock strata that has housed the oil for thousands of years is purely Argentinian, not British.
Malvinas would be as if we claimed their North Sea oil because a few Argentinian families had settled on the east coast of Scotland.
Rio Gallegos has joined up the last dot in a long chain of Argentinian oil fields.