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Answer for the clue "Babylonian deity ", 3 letters:
anu

Alternative clues for the word anu

Word definitions for anu in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Anu is a feminine given name and surname found independently in several cultures. The Indian name is a short form of Anuradha . The Finnish name is derived from the Karelian variant of the name Anna , which became popular in Finland after Kersti Bergroth ...

Usage examples of anu.

She stood up and put her hands on the lapels of his coat and Grew mcni lugciiici anu uni-iuiiing i.

Janet, he found, was a surprising woman, apart from his knowledge of her as a child, and a young girl, when he remembered her being full of chitcnat, anu merry, anu liicii uuruig ucr visus lu ucip 111 luc uuusc when she had appeared slightly reserved, he had really known nothing about her.

The Greater and the Lesser Companies of the Gods assembled in the celestial Anu, or Heliopolis, and ordered Osiris to stand up and defend himself against the charges brought against him by Set.

Now, more than ever, she needed to be the warrior Kelsey , the woman who backed down to no one, anu not just because Bill Winslow was once again after her life.

Because of the priest of Anu, the Gunderman was taken and hanged in the market square.

Polynesian languages and cultures far to the west of Polynesia, in the eastern sector of the Melanesian islands: Tikopia, Anuta, Rennell, Bellona, Stewart, Ontong Java, the Duffs, and numbers of others.

While most of them show signs of settlement or resettlement within the last seven hundred years, others, such as Anuta and Tikopia have been inhabited by Polynesian-related peoples for over two thousand years.

The upper extreme of 1,100 people per square mile was reached on the high island of Anuta, whose population converted essentially all the land to intensive food production, thereby crammed 160 people into the island's 100 acres, and joined the ranks of the densest self-sufficient populations in the world.

The upper extreme of 1,100 people per square mile was reached on the high island of Anuta, whose population converted essentially all the land to intensive food production, thereby crammed 160 people into the island’s 100 acres, and joined the ranks of the densest self-sufficient populations in the world.

Dryland agriculture became especially productive on Easter, tiny Anuta, and flat and low Tonga, where Polynesians devoted most of the land area to the growing of food.

The upper extreme of 1,100 people per square mile was reached on the high island of Anuta, whose population converted essentially all the land to intensive food production, thereby crammed 160 people into the island’.