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Russian Riviera
Answer for the clue "Russian Riviera ", 6 letters:
crimea
Alternative clues for the word crimea
- Signatory on a controversial 2014 treaty
- Atrocity committed on a field of battle?
- Sevastopol's region
- "The Charge of the Light Brigade" war zone
- Peninsula in 2014 news
- Land bordering the Black Sea
- Where the Light Brigade charged
- Unlawful act beginning to annex part of Ukraine
- Ukrainian peninsula seized by Russia in 2014
- Yalta's area
Usage examples of crimea.
It was a photo of myself with a group of friends taken in the Crimea when I had been simply Corporal T.
If someone who survived the Crimea, the police and then eight years of tricky LiteraTec work came to me and told me that Hades was still alive, I'd listen to them.
I had felt it once before in the Crimea and I had hated myself for it then, too.
The Crimea is good, Thursday — good for England and especially good for the economy.
I recognised it as the sort of high-wing observation planes they used in the Crimea for artillery spotting.
England, weighed down with troubles in the Crimea and Ireland, saw no good reason to argue with a belligerent and committed Welsh assembly.
National security and the Crimea depend upon it and one lousy officer's life isn't worth diddly shit when you look at the big picture.
Even Colonel Phelps over there would agree with me that it's high time the Crimea was put to bed permanently.
The Crimea is good, Thursday – good for England and especially good for the economy.
And past him a trio of officers, on furlough from the Crimea, looking very pleased with themselves, come to hear about an old-fashioned war in Texas, fought the old-fashioned way.
But he seemed to have lost his natural audience, the soldiers, for the three Crimea veterans in Sybil's row were still muttering angrily about Hickory Jackson.
Inside, all was as she'd left it, though she saw that Hetty had left the latest number of the Illustrated London News on her pillow, with an engraving from Crimea on the front, a scene of a city all aflame.
I rather doubt it's legal, even for one of your gallant Crimea heroes.
A recent innovation from New South Wales, Oliphant knew, much praised in the Crimea and precisely the thing for concealing weapons of the sort that these two most certainly concealed.
The baking priest, eighty-five years old at least and dancing and singing in front of his oven as he baked his loaves of bread in four shapes, the four concerns of his life, the Cross for God and Ireland for home, the Crimea where he had given up war and Jerusalem where he had found peace.