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Iranian city
Answer for the clue "Iranian city ", 6 letters:
kerman
Word definitions for kerman in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 8551 Housing Units (2000): 2462 Land area (2000): 2.164136 sq. miles (5.605086 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 2.164136 sq. miles (5.605086 sq. km) FIPS code: 38226 Located within: California ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Kerman is the capital city of Kerman Province, Iran. It may also refer to:
Usage examples of kerman.
Ray Kerman stood to attention in front of Lieutenant Colonel Russell Makin, the Commanding Officer of 22 SAS.
Colonel then stepped forward and handed to Captain Ray Kerman the distinctive, coveted beige beret of the SAS.
Monday morning, Captain Raymond Kerman was accepted into one of the two top fighting military units in the world, the other being the U.
Major Kerman, with his immaculate SAS record, and inescapably Jewish surname, was not precisely what he seemed.
Richard Kerman, taking a new name from an old place in the manner of many Middle Eastern families far from home.
Bandar Abbas, Richard Kerman opened a string of warehouses in southern England, and then invested in a small shipping line to transport the costly wool and silk floor coverings up through the Suez Canal and on through the Mediterranean to Southampton.
Tons and tons of them, all grown in another town in the Kerman region, the tree-lined twelfth-century citadel of Bam.
Nothing to reveal that Raymond Kerman was really Ravi Rashood, born Iranian from the southeast of that country.
Lieutenant Raymond Kerman, first in his year at the Academy, a top sportsman at Harrow School, the son of wealthy, well-known North London parents, heir to the Kerman shipping line.
Hereford, bound for an unidentified Army base in the Negev, Captain Kerman had been summoned to see the SAS Commanding Officer.
SAS enjoys a towering reputation in the Israeli Army, and Major Kerman, a stern and uncompromising officer, was deadly serious about his job.
He was Major Ray Kerman, and these Arabs were foreign to him, though their closeness did jolt a certain recall of stories told to him by the bearded Saudi in the North London mosque a quarter of a century ago.
Major Kerman once more alone with his thoughts, saying nothing, his secrets safe.
Major Kerman was issuing his final briefing to the SAS team that would shortly embark the Israeli Army helicopter and take off for several different locations.
Israeli helicopter took off bearing the SAS men to their destinations, flying over the Holy Land, bound first for the grim headquarters of Northern Command, where Ray Kerman, Fred, and Charlie would disembark prior to joining the Golani Brigade, the tight IDF battalion that would provide the main cordon in Hebron.