Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Iraqi city ", 5 letters:
amara

Alternative clues for the word amara

Word definitions for amara in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (given name female from=coinages) of modern usage taken from fantasy fiction; explained, for example , as a (etyl sa en) word for "eternal". 2 A port on the River Tigris in Iraq.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Amara , also known as Stone, is the fictional world in British fantasy author Graham Edwards ' Stone trilogy . To protagonists Jonah Lightfoot and Annie West, Amara first seems a giant, never-ending stone wall, extended in all directions and tilted approximately ...

Usage examples of amara.

The soldier stopped and looked up at Amara, studying her with quiet, hard eyes.

She tilted her head to one side, watching, as Amara unfolded the paper and studied the writing inside.

The wasted-seeming girl had far more strength than Amara would have credited to her, and the blow stunned Amara and sent her tumbling back into the stream.

The water witch shot a glare at both Fidelias and Amara and then left.

It rose from the river in full color, and Amara thought, for just a moment, that the First Lord himself had somehow come, rather than sending a fury in his place.

First Lady pressed her lips together, but gave a graceful, proper nod, before her image abruptly fell back into the water, creating a splash that drenched Amara to the waist.

He had shaved his beard since Amara had seen him last, and the lines of age, faint on the mostly youthful features, showed as dark shadows at the corners of his eyes and mouth.

Gaius appeared to be a hale forty years of agein fact, Amara knew that he was twice that.

When you reach my age, Amara, people show themselves to you very clearly.

At a guess, he called the furies of the southern air to assist Amara or one of the other Cursors northeither to the capital or to the Valley itself.

Tears had started down his cheeks, and Amara swallowed upon seeing them.

For a moment, Amara was acutely conscious of the sensation of his skin upon hers, the way the cloak and her skirts had fallen to reveal her leg nearly to the knee.

More than anything, Amara wanted to go somewhere dark and quiet and curl into a ball.

Me and Amara have to get to Count Gram and warn him that the Marat are coming.

For a while, Amara ran beside him in silence, hardly limping at allbut after a quarter mile, her motion became uneven, and on her exhales she started letting out whimpers of sound.